Skip to content

The Individual Shared Responsibility Provision

Under the Affordable Care Act, the federal government, state governments, insurers, employers, and individuals are given shared responsibility to reform and improve the availability, quality, and affordability of health insurance coverage in the United States.

Specifically, this provision requires each individual to:

  • Have minimum essential health coverage every month,
  • Qualify for an exemption, or
  • Make a shared responsibility payment

Tax Reform Changes

The new tax law didn’t change the ISRP for tax year 2018 (except for the annual inflation adjustments). However, it reduced the payment to $0 for tax years beginning after December 31, 2018.

Visit Tax Reform Changes for more information about other changes under the new tax law.

Minimum Essential Coverage

Minimum essential coverage means coverage under a government-sponsored program, an eligible employer-sponsored plan, a plan in the individual market, a grandfathered health plan, or other health benefits coverage.

You can get more information about what types of coverage count as minimum essential coverage at:

Exemptions

You may be exempt from the requirement to maintain minimum essential coverage and thus will not have to make a shared responsibility payment when you file your federal income tax return if you meet certain criteria.

You may be exempt if:

  • Your income is below the filing threshold for your filing status,
  • You have a gap in coverage for less than three consecutive months, or
  • You qualify for an exemption for one of several other reasons, including having a hardship that prevents you from obtaining coverage or belonging to a group explicitly exempt from the requirement.

The estimator will automatically determine if you or your family members may be eligible for the short coverage gap or if your income is below the filing threshold for your filing status.

Short Coverage Gap Exemption

Short coverage gap means a continuous period of less than three months in which you or any of your family members are not covered under minimum essential coverage.

If you or any of your family members don't have minimum essential coverage for a continuous period of three or more months, none of the months included in the continuous period are treated as included in a short coverage gap.

If a calendar year includes more than one short coverage gap, the exemption only applies to the earliest short coverage gap.

Income Below Filing Threshold

You may be exempt from the payment if your gross income or your household income is less than your applicable minimum threshold for filing a tax return.

You can get more information on this exemption and the filing threshold from Reporting and Calculating the Payment on IRS.gov

Additional Information

You can get more information about what types of exemptions are available at at:

Shared Responsibility Payment

If you, your spouse (if married and filing a joint return), or any of your dependents don't have minimum essential coverage and don't qualify for an exemption, you'll need to pay the shared responsibility payment for each family member that isn't covered and isn't exempt.

The payment is either a percentage of the portion of your household income that is over the filing threshold for your age (and your spouse's age if married and filing jointly) and filing status or a flat dollar amount per family member.

However, the payment is capped at the national average premium for a bronze level health plan available through the Marketplace.

You can get more information on the payment and how it is calculated at:

KEY TERMS

The Payment

How the payment is determined

In general, the Shared Responsibility Payment is one of the following:

  • A flat dollar amount. For 2018, it is $695 per person (half that for individuals under 18) and capped at the amount for 3 adults.
  • A percentage of your income (your excess income amount). For 2018, it is 2.5% of your income over the filing threshold for your filing status.
  • The national average bronze plan premium. For 2018, it is $283 per month for each family member (up to four) and $1,415 per month for a family with five or more.

If you are subject to the Shared Responsibility Payment, the payment is the larger of the flat dollar amount or your excess income amount.

The national average bronze plan premium is an overall cap (limit) on the payment. If the flat dollar amount or your excess income amount is greater than the national average bronze plan premium for your family size, the payment will be equal to the national average bronze plan premium.

Bronze Plan Premium

A monthly amount that is 1⁄12 of the annual national average premium for qualified health plans that:

  • Have a bronze level of coverage,
  • Would provide coverage for your family members who do not have minimum essential coverage, and
  • Are offered through Exchanges for plan years during the tax year.

The national average bronze plan premium is an overall cap (limit) on the payment. If the flat dollar amount or your excess income amount is greater than the national average bronze plan premium for your family size, the payment will be equal to the national average bronze plan premium.

Excess Income Amount

A certain percentage of the amount of your household income over your filing threshold.

It is defined as the product of:

  • The excess of your household income over your filing threshold for your age (and age of your spouse if married filing jointly) and filing status.
  • The income percentage, which is:
    • 1% for 2014,
    • 2% for 2015,
    • 2.5% for 2016 and forward.

Exemptions

You may be exempt from the requirement to maintain minimum essential coverage and thus will not have to make a shared responsibility payment when you file your return if you meet certain criteria.

For more information about the exemptions, see:

Family Members

Your family members include you, your spouse (if married and filing a joint return), and everyone you are able to claim as dependents.

Your Shared Responsibility Family: For the shared responsibility provision, in each month, all family members who:

  • Do not have minimum essential health coverage for the month and
  • Do not qualify for an exemption.

Filing Threshold

Tax return filing threshold is the amount of gross income an individual of your age and with your filing status (e.g., single, married filing jointly, head of household) must make to be required to file a tax return.

Flat Dollar Amount

The lesser of:

  • The sum of the applicable dollar amounts for all individuals included in your shared responsibility family; or
  • 300 percent of the applicable dollar amount for adults.

The Applicable Dollar Amount

For adults it is:

  • $695 in 2016,
  • $695 in 2017, or
  • $695 in 2018

For family members under age 18, the applicable dollar amount is half the amount for adults.

Household Income

Household income is the adjusted gross income from your tax return plus any excludible foreign earned income and tax-exempt interest you receive during the taxable year. Household income also includes the incomes of all of your dependents who are required to file tax returns.

Minimum Essential Coverage

Minimum essential coverage means coverage under a government-sponsored program, an eligible employer-sponsored plan, a plan in the individual market, a grandfathered health plan, or other health benefits coverage.

Monthly Penalty Amount

For an individual that does not qualify for an exemption and is not covered under minimum essential coverage, 1/12 multiplied by the greater of:

  • The flat dollar amount; or
  • The excess income amount.

Additionally, the national average bronze plan premium is an overall cap (limit) on the payment. If the flat dollar amount or your excess income amount is greater than the national average bronze plan premium for your family size, the payment will be equal to the national average bronze plan premium.

Short Coverage Gap

Short coverage gap means a continuous period of less than three months in which the individual is not covered under minimum essential coverage.

If the individual does not have minimum essential coverage for a continuous period of three or more months, none of the months included in the continuous period are treated as included in a short coverage gap.

If a calendar year includes more than one short coverage gap, the exemption only applies to the earliest short coverage gap.