You have until March 31 to sign up for health insurance or pay the penalty: $95, or 1 percent of your income based on your income tax return, whichever is greater in 2014 (that goes way up by 2016: $695, or 2.5 percent of income). There are some exceptions – like if your plan was one of the thousands canceled last year in a big healthcare.gov oopsie.
If you get insurance through a large employer, the health law is unlikely to affect your plan, although your employer is allowed to change the plan. The law also made a few changes to workplace insurance: Plans generally lifetime coverage limits and include a that an adult child (yes, there is such a thing) up to age 26 can stay on his or her parents’ health plan. Some small employers are asking their workers to get insurance through health exchanges.
Some existing plans, if they haven’t changed significantly since the law passed, . These “grandfathered plans,” for example, can still charge co-pays for preventive services, which the health law otherwise requires to be free. If you have one of these plans and your employer makes changes that raise your out-of-pocket costs, the plan would then lose its grandfathered status and all the ACA’s protections would kick in.
Insurers can no longer deny you coverage, charge you more based on a pre-existing medical condition or limit the coverage of , which include prescription drugs and hospitalization. They also can’t kick you off the plan just because you got sick.
You are likely eligible for some such as breast cancer screenings and cholesterol tests with no out-of-pocket costs to you. Hugs, however, aren’t included.
If you live in one of the 25 states and the District of Columbia that expanded Medicaid, the government is offering to fully cover insurance costs for anyone making less than about $16,000 for an individual and $32,500 for a family of four. If you make too much money for Medicaid, you still qualify for a subsidy through the insurance marketplaces. Those are available, for example, to people making $11,490-$45,960 per year.
Starting in 2015, businesses with 50 or more full-time employees . Firms with won’t face any penalties, however, and if you own a small business or start-up, the health law offers a tax credit to help cover the cost.
The Oct. 1 launch of healthcare.gov frustrated millions of consumers and gave Republicans on Capitol Hill plenty of ammunition. Then President Barack Obama had to apologize for a promise that turned out to be one he couldn’t keep when millions of Americans who buy coverage on the individual market began to learn that their current health plans were being canceled. With all that making headlines, some Americans were still having difficulty in late December trying to sign up for coverage to begin Jan. 1, so to let people who enrolled by Dec. 24 to pay as late as Jan. 10 and beyond. Officials say more than 2.2 million people have successfully enrolled in health law plans.
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