Fees on Health Insurance Policies and Self-Insured Plans for the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund, 22691-22706 [2012-9173]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 74 / Tuesday, April 17, 2012 / Proposed Rules
will facilitate the VEUs’ ability to
comply with the specific conditions
placed on their qualifications as VEUs
and distinguish those conditions from
conditions placed on items received
under other authorizations. This will
enhance accountability and ensuring
effective control of items shipped under
Authorization VEU and other
authorizations.
In addition, this action is likely to
enhance the attractiveness of shipping
‘‘Eligible Items’’ under Authorization
VEU for exporters and reexporters, or
persons making in-country transfers.
This potential benefit outweighs any
perceived inconvenience to exporters
and reexporters, or persons making incountry transfers, who ship under
Authorization VEU, as they retain the
option to ship under an individual
validated license.
In this rule, BIS also proposes to
amend section 748.15—Authorization
Validated End-User—by adding
paragraph (h)—Termination of
Conditions on VEU Authorizations. This
proposed amendment would clarify that
VEUs who are subject to item-specific
conditions and have received items
subject to such conditions under
Authorization VEU would no longer be
bound by the conditions associated with
the items if the items no longer require
a license for export or reexport to the
PRC or India (depending on the VEU’s
location) or become eligible for
shipment under a license exception to
the destination. This proposed
amendment would be the same, in
effect, as existing section 750.7(i)
(Terminating license conditions), which
generally applies to exporters and
reexporters who have shipped under
license.
For the reasons stated, the Chief
Counsel for Regulation of the
Department of Commerce has certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration that this
proposed rule, if adopted in final form,
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
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List of Subjects in 15 CFR Part 748
Administrative practice and
procedure, Exports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Accordingly, part 748 of the Export
Administration Regulations (15 CFR
parts 730–774) is proposed to be
amended as follows:
PART 748—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 748 continues to read as follows:
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Authority: 50 U.S.C. app. 2401 et seq; 50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.; E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767,
3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66
FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; Notice
of August 12, 2011 (76 FR 50661 (August 16,
2011)).
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
2. Section 748.15 is amended by
adding paragraphs (g), (h) and (i) to read
as follows:
[REG–136008–11]
§ 748.15
(VEU).
Fees on Health Insurance Policies and
Self-Insured Plans for the PatientCentered Outcomes Research Trust
Fund
Authorization Validated End-User
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Notification requirement.
Exporters and reexporters shipping
under Authorization VEU and persons
transferring (in-country) under
Authorization VEU are required to
provide the validated end-users to
whom they are shipping notice of the
shipment. Such notification must be
conveyed to the VEU in writing and
must include a list of the contents of the
shipment and a list of the ECCNs under
which the items in the shipment are
classified, as well as a statement that the
shipment is, will be, or was made
pursuant to Authorization VEU.
Notification must be made within seven
calendar days of the export, reexport or
transfer (in-country) to the VEU.
Exporters, reexporters and VEUs are
required to maintain the notifications
they receive in accordance with their
recordkeeping requirements.
(h) Termination of Conditions on VEU
Authorizations. VEUs that are subject to
item-specific conditions and have
received items subject to such
conditions under Authorization VEU are
no longer bound by the conditions
associated with the items if the items no
longer require a license for export or
reexport to the PRC or India, as
applicable, or become eligible for
shipment under a license exception to
the destination. Termination of VEU
conditions does not relieve a validated
end-user of its responsibility for
violations that occurred prior to the
availability of a license exception or
prior to the removal of license
requirements.
(i) Records. Records of items that were
shipped under Authorization VEU prior
to the removal of a license requirement
or the availability of a license exception
remain subject to the review
requirements of paragraph (f)(2) of this
section on and after the date that the
license requirement was removed or the
license exception became applicable.
Dated: April 10, 2012.
Kevin J. Wolf,
Assistant Secretary for Export
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2012–9237 Filed 4–16–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–33–P
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Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 40 and 46
RIN 1545–BK59
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
and notice of public hearing.
AGENCY:
This document contains
proposed regulations that implement
and provide guidance on the fees
imposed by the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act on issuers of certain
health insurance policies and plan
sponsors of certain self-insured health
plans to fund the Patient-Centered
Outcomes Research Trust Fund. These
proposed regulations affect the issuers
and plan sponsors that are directed to
pay those fees. This document also
contains a request for comments and
provides notice of public hearing on
these proposed regulations.
DATES: Written or electronic comments
must be received by July 16, 2012.
Requests to speak and outlines of topics
to be discussed at the public hearing
scheduled for Wednesday, August 8,
2012, at 10 a.m., must be received by
July 30, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–136008–11),
Internal Revenue Service, P.O. Box
7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington,
DC 20044. Submissions may be handdelivered Monday through Friday
between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.
to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–136008–11),
Courier’s Desk Internal Revenue
Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC, or sent electronically
via the IRS Internet site via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (IRS REG–136008–
11). The public hearing will be held in
the IRS Auditorium at the Internal
Revenue Building, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
Rebecca L. Baxter at (202) 622–3970
(regarding health insurance policies) or
R. Lisa Mojiri-Azad at (202) 622–6080
(regarding self-insured health
arrangements); concerning the
submission of comments or the public
hearing, Oluwafunmilayo (Funmi)
SUMMARY:
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Taylor at (202) 622–7180 (not toll-free
numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information
contained in this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)). Comments on the collection of
information should be sent to the Office
of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk
Officer for the Department of the
Treasury, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC
20503, with copies to the Internal
Revenue Service, Attn: IRS Reports
Clearance Officer,
SE:W:CAR:MP:T:T:SP, Washington, DC
20224. Comments on the collection of
information should be received by July
16, 2012. Comments are specifically
requested concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the IRS,
including whether the information will
have practical utility;
How the quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected may be
enhanced;
How the burden of complying with
the proposed collection of information
may be minimized, including through
the application of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology; and
Estimates of capital or start-up costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
The collections of information in
these proposed regulations are in
§ 46.4375–1(c)(2)(v) (use of National
Association of Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC) Supplemental Health Care
Exhibit to calculate the fee under
section 4375); § 46.4375–1(c)(2)(vi) (use
of certain state forms to calculate the fee
under section 4375); § 46.4376–
1(b)(2)(G) (identification or designation
of a plan sponsor under the governing
plan document for certain applicable
self-insured health plans); and
§ 46.4376–1(c)(2)(v) (use of the Form
5500, ‘‘Annual Return/Report of
Employee Benefit Plan,’’ to calculate the
fee under section 4376).
The collections of information under
§ 46.4375–1(c)(2)(v), § 46.4375–
1(c)(2)(vi), and § 46.4376–1(c)(2)(v) are
intended to lower the burden on issuers
and plan sponsors of calculating the
average number of lives covered for the
applicable policy year or plan year. The
burden for the collection of information
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contained in these provisions will be
reflected in the burden on the Form 720
‘‘Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return’’
after it is revised to include the
reporting and payment of the fee
imposed by sections 4375 and 4376.
The collection of information
contained in § 46.4376–1(b)(2)(G) is
necessary to provide certain entities that
establish or maintain an applicable selfinsured health plan the flexibility to
designate the person that will be
responsible for reporting and paying the
fee imposed by section 4376. The likely
respondents are employers, employee
organizations, or persons that establish
or maintain an applicable self-insured
health plan and are entitled to make an
election under § 46.4376–1(b)(2)(G).
Estimated number of respondents is
10,000.
Estimated average annual burden per
respondent is 5 minutes.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a valid control
number assigned by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Books or records relating to a
collection of information must be
retained as long as their contents may
become material in the administration
of any internal revenue law. Generally,
tax returns and tax return information
are confidential, as required by 26
U.S.C. 6103.
Background
This document contains proposed
amendments to 26 CFR part 40 (Excise
Tax Procedural Regulations) and 26 CFR
part 46 (relating to excise taxes imposed
on policies issued by foreign insurers
and obligations not in registered form)
to implement the requirements under
sections 4375 through 4377 of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code). Sections
4375 and 4376 of the Code impose fees
on issuers of specified health insurance
policies and plan sponsors of applicable
self-insured health plans, and section
4377 contains special rules that apply to
these issuers and plan sponsors with
respect to these fees. Sections 4375,
4376, and 4377 were added to the Code
by section 6301 of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act (Affordable
Care Act), Public Law 111–148 (124
Stat. 119 (2010)).
The Affordable Care Act includes
provisions that promote research to
evaluate and compare health outcomes
and the clinical effectiveness, risks, and
benefits of medical treatments, services,
procedures, drugs, and other strategies
or items that treat, manage, diagnose, or
prevent illness or injury. One such
provision relates to the establishment of
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the private, nonprofit corporation, the
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research
Institute (the ‘‘Institute’’). The Institute
will assist, through research, patients,
clinicians, purchasers, and policymakers in making informed health
decisions by advancing the quality and
relevance of evidence-based medicine
through the synthesis and dissemination
of comparative clinical effectiveness
research findings. The statute
specifically prohibits the Secretary of
Health and Human Services (HHS) from
using the evidence or findings of the
research conducted in determining
coverage, reimbursement, or incentive
programs unless it is through an
iterative and transparent process which
includes public comment and considers
the effect on subpopulations. Nothing
under this provision allows the
Secretary of HHS to deny coverage of
items or services solely on the basis of
comparative clinical effectiveness
research. The statute provides that the
Institute will not develop a dollars-perquality-life-year estimate as a threshold
to establish effective or recommended
care. Section 6301 of the Affordable
Care Act amended the Code by adding
new section 9511 to establish the
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research
Trust Fund (the ‘‘Trust Fund’’), which is
the funding source for the Institute.
Section 6301 of the Affordable Care Act
also added new Code sections 4375,
4376, and 4377 to provide a funding
source for the Trust Fund that is to be
financed, in part, by fees to be paid by
issuers of specified health insurance
policies and sponsors of applicable selfinsured health plans.
Statutory Provisions
Section 4375(a) imposes a fee on an
issuer of a specified health insurance
policy for each policy year ending on or
after October 1, 2012, and before
October 1, 2019. Under section 4375(a),
the fee is two dollars (one dollar in the
case of policy years ending before
October 1, 2013) multiplied by the
average number of lives covered under
the policy. Under section 4375(d), for
policy years ending on or after October
1, 2014, the fee is increased based on
increases in the projected per capita
amount of National Health
Expenditures. Section 4375(b) provides
that the fee imposed by section 4375(a)
shall be paid by the issuer of the policy.
Section 4375(c) defines specified
health insurance policy as any accident
or health insurance policy (including a
policy under a group health plan) issued
with respect to individuals residing in
the United States. Section 4375(c)(2)
excludes from a specified health
insurance policy any insurance if
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substantially all of its coverage is of
excepted benefits described in section
9832(c). Section 4375(c)(3) provides that
a specified health insurance policy
includes any prepaid health coverage
arrangement described in section
4375(c)(3)(B). An arrangement is
described in section 4375(c)(3)(B) if,
under the arrangement, fixed payments
or premiums are received as
consideration for a person’s agreement
to provide or arrange for the provision
of accident or health coverage to
residents of the United States, regardless
of how the coverage is provided or
arranged to be provided.
Section 4376 imposes a fee on a plan
sponsor of an applicable self-insured
health plan for each plan year ending on
or after October 1, 2012, and before
October 1, 2019. Under section 4376(a),
the fee is two dollars (one dollar for
plan years ending before October 1,
2013) multiplied by the average number
of lives covered under the plan for the
plan year. Under section 4376(d), for
plan years ending on or after October 1,
2014, the fee is increased based on
increases in the projected per capita
amount of National Health
Expenditures. Section 4376(b)(1)
provides that the fee imposed by section
4376(a) shall be paid by the plan
sponsor.
Section 4376(b)(2) defines plan
sponsor as the employer in the case of
a plan established or maintained by a
single employer, or the employee
organization in the case of a plan
established or maintained by an
employee organization. Section
4376(b)(2) also provides that, in the case
of (1) a plan established or maintained
by two or more employers or jointly by
one or more employers and one or more
employee organizations, (2) a multiple
employer welfare arrangement, or (3) a
voluntary employees’ beneficiary
association described in section
501(c)(9), the plan sponsor is the
association, committee, joint board of
trustees, or other similar group of
representatives of the parties who
establish or maintain the plan. Section
4376(b)(2) further provides that in the
case of a plan established or maintained
by a rural electric cooperative (as
defined in section 3(40)(B)(iv) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA)) or rural telephone
cooperative association (as defined in
section 3(40)(B)(v) of ERISA), the plan
sponsor is the cooperative or association
that established or maintained the plan.
Section 4376(c) defines applicable
self-insured health plan as any plan for
providing accident or health coverage if
any portion of the coverage is provided
other than through an insurance policy,
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and the plan is established or
maintained: (1) By one or more
employers for the benefit of their
employees or former employees, (2) by
one or more employee organizations for
the benefit of their members or former
members, (3) jointly by one or more
employers and one or more employee
organizations for the benefit of
employees or former employees, (4) by
a voluntary employees’ beneficiary
association described in section
501(c)(9), (5) by any organization
described in section 501(c)(6), or (6) if
not previously described, by a multiple
employer welfare arrangement (as
defined in section 3(40) of ERISA), a
rural electric cooperative (as defined in
section 3(40)(B)(iv) of ERISA), or a rural
telephone cooperative association (as
defined in section 3(40)(B)(v) of ERISA).
Section 4377 includes definitions and
special rules that apply for purposes of
sections 4375 and 4376. Section
4377(a)(1) defines accident and health
coverage as any coverage that, if
provided by an insurance policy, would
cause the policy to be a specified health
insurance policy (as defined in section
4375(c)).
Section 4377(b)(1)(B) provides that
‘‘[n]otwithstanding any other law or rule
of law, governmental entities shall not
be exempt from’’ the fee imposed by
sections 4375 and 4376 unless the
policy or plan is an exempt
governmental program. Section
4377(b)(3) defines exempt governmental
program as (1) any insurance program
established under title XVIII of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et
seq.) (Medicare), (2) the medical
assistance program established by title
XIX (42 U.S.C. 1396 et seq.) (Medicaid)
or title XXI of the Social Security Act
(42 U.S.C. 1397aa et seq.) (Children’s
Health Insurance Program), (3) any
program established by Federal law for
providing medical care (other than
through insurance policies) to
individuals (or the spouses and
dependents thereof) by reason of such
individuals being members of the
Armed Forces of the United States or
veterans, and (4) any program
established by Federal law for providing
medical care (other than through
insurance policies) to members of
Indian tribes (as defined in section 4(d)
of the Indian Health Care Improvement
Act, 25 U.S.C. 1603). Under these
special rules, a governmental entity
(including a federally recognized Indian
tribal government) that is the plan
sponsor of an applicable self-insured
health plan that does not meet the
definition of an exempt governmental
program must pay the fee imposed by
section 4376.
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Section 4377(c) provides that the fees
imposed by sections 4375 and 4376 are
treated as taxes for purposes of subtitle
F of the Code.
Notice 2011–35
On June 8, 2011, the IRS released
Notice 2011–35 (2011–25 IRB 879),
which requested comments on how the
fees imposed under sections 4375 and
4376 should be calculated and paid,
including possible rules and safe
harbors. The Treasury Department and
the IRS received numerous comments in
response to Notice 2011–35 and have
considered all comments in drafting
these proposed regulations. The relevant
portions of Notice 2011–35 and
comments are discussed in more detail
in this preamble. See § 601.601(d)(2).
Explanation of Provisions
Specified Health Insurance Policies
Subject to the Fee Under Section 4375
The fee under section 4375 is
imposed on the issuer of a specified
health insurance policy. Under the
proposed regulations, the fee must be
calculated using the applicable dollar
amount in effect for the policy year (for
example, $1 for policy years ending on
or after October 1, 2012, and before
October 1, 2013) and one of the
permitted methods for determining the
average number of lives covered under
the policy during the policy year.
The term specified health insurance
policy includes only accident and
health insurance policies that are issued
with respect to an individual residing in
the United States. The proposed
regulations clarify that for purposes of
this fee, ‘‘an individual residing in the
United States’’ means an individual
who has a place of abode in the United
States. The United States, for this
purpose, includes American Samoa,
Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands,
Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and any
other possession of the United States.
Commentators requested a bright-line
rule for determining whether an
individual covered by a policy is
residing in the United States. Many
commentators suggested that issuers
should be able to rely on the address on
file for the primary insured to determine
whether individuals covered by the
policy are residing in the United States.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
recognize that the address on file for the
primary insured may be the only
information the insurer has with respect
to the residence of the individuals
covered under the policy, and also that
the address on file is likely the place of
abode for most, if not all, of the covered
individuals. Accordingly, the proposed
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regulations provide that if the address
on file with the issuer or plan sponsor
for the primary insured is outside of the
United States, the issuer or plan sponsor
may treat the primary insured and the
primary insured’s spouse, dependents,
or other beneficiaries covered under the
policy as having the same place of
abode and not residing in the United
States. For this purpose, the term
‘‘primary insured’’ refers to the
individual eligible for coverage other
than due to his or her status as a spouse,
dependent, or other beneficiary of
another insured individual (for
example, in the case of a group health
plan for employees, the individual
eligible for coverage due to his or her
status as an employee).
Several commentators also suggested
that expatriate policies not be
considered specified health insurance
policies for purposes of the fee because
the policies are issued principally to
cover employees who do not reside in
the United States. Commentators argued
that expatriate policies are
predominantly group health insurance
policies sold to employers for a unique
subset of their employees, the
substantial majority of whom are living
outside the United States while working
for the employer. According to these
commentators, only a small minority of
the individuals covered under these
expatriate policies may be foreign
nationals working for the employer in
the United States. For these reasons, the
proposed regulations provide that the
term ‘‘specified health insurance
policy’’ does not include any group
policy issued to an employer if the facts
and circumstances show that the group
policy was designed and issued
specifically to cover primarily
employees who are working and
residing outside of the United States.
Commentators requested that the
regulations provide that stop loss and
indemnity reinsurance policies not be
considered specified health insurance
policies. Commentators argued that stop
loss and indemnity reinsurance policies
are not providing coverage for lives
covered; rather, these types of policies
are intended to limit the original
obligor’s financial exposure. Section
4375 imposes a fee based on the average
number of lives covered. Because stop
loss and indemnity reinsurance policies
generally do not provide coverage based
upon the number of lives covered, the
proposed regulations provide that for
purposes of section 4375, these policies
are not specified health insurance
policies subject to the fee under section
4375. No inference is intended as to
whether stop loss or indemnity
reinsurance policies may constitute
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health insurance policies for other
purposes.
Commentators raised questions about
the description of prepaid health
coverage arrangements in section
4375(c)(3)(B) and requested that the
regulations clarify which types of
arrangements are covered by that
section. One commentator suggested
that the language in section
4375(c)(3)(B) is intended to describe
health maintenance organizations and
similar arrangements, noting that the
definition of ‘‘health insurance,’’ which
was added to ERISA, the Public Health
Service Act, and the Code by the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law
104–191 (110 Stat. 1936 (1996)), was
specifically drafted to include health
maintenance organizations and similar
arrangements. The Treasury Department
and the IRS agree that the language in
section 4375(c)(3)(B) describes health
maintenance organizations and similar
organizations; therefore, the proposed
regulations clarify that the description
in section 4375(c)(3)(B) covers any
hospital or medical service policy or
certificate, hospital or medical service
plan contract, or health maintenance
organization contract.
Self-insured Health Plans and Plan
Sponsors Subject to the Fee Under
Section 4376
The fee under section 4376 is
imposed on the plan sponsor of an
applicable self-insured health plan.
Under the statute and these proposed
regulations, the fee must be calculated
using the applicable dollar amount in
effect for the plan year (for example, $1
for plan years ending on or after October
1, 2012, and before October 1, 2013) and
one of the permitted methods for
determining the average number of lives
covered under the plan during the plan
year.
These proposed regulations provide
that an applicable self-insured health
plan is a plan that is established or
maintained by a plan sponsor for the
benefit of employees, former employees,
members, former members, or other
eligible individuals to provide accident
and health coverage (within the
meaning of § 46.4377–1(a)(1) of these
proposed regulations), any portion of
which is provided other than through an
insurance policy and that meets certain
other conditions. The proposed
regulations provide that an applicable
self-insured health plan does not
include an exempt governmental
program (as defined in section
4377(c)(3)) but does include a plan that
is established or maintained solely for
the benefit of former employees
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(commonly referred to as a retiree-only
plan).1 A self-insured health plan that
does not provide coverage described in
section 4376(c) is not an applicable selfinsured health plan. For example, a selfinsured group health plan of a Federally
recognized Indian tribal government
that provides coverage only to tribal
members that are not employees of the
Indian tribal government would not be
an applicable self-insured health plan,
unless it otherwise falls within one of
the statutory definitions of an applicable
self-insured health plan (for example,
the plan is established or maintained by
a section 501(c)(6) organization).
Notice 2011–35 (2011–25 IRB 879)
invited comments on the type or types
of health flexible spending
arrangements (as described in section
106(c)(2)) (health FSAs) and health
reimbursement arrangements (as
described in Notice 2002–45 (2002–2 CB
93)) (HRAs) that would be excluded
from the definition of an applicable selfinsured health plan because they
provide the kind of coverage that, if
provided by an insurance policy, would
not cause the policy to be treated as a
specified health insurance policy, as
defined in section 4375(c). Health FSAs
and HRAs are both self-insured health
plans.2 See § 601.601(d)(2).
Commentators generally requested
that all health FSAs and HRAs be
excluded from the definition of
applicable self-insured health plan
under section 4376. Commentators also
suggested that because the majority of
health FSAs or HRAs are provided in
connection with a major medical plan,
they should be excluded from the fee
imposed by section 4376 to avoid the
fee from being imposed twice with
respect to the same individual. Some of
the commentators also observed that
there would be challenges arising from
the possibility that an employer may
lack information on the number of
dependents whose medical expenses are
1 Sections 4375 and 4376 may apply to a retireeonly plan because, although section 9832 excludes
group health plans that have less than two
participants who are current employees (such as
retiree-only plans) from the requirements of chapter
100 (which includes a number of requirements
added by the Affordable Care Act), this exclusion
does not apply to sections 4375 and 4376 because
these sections are in chapter 34. In addition, section
4376(c)(2)(A) indicates explicitly that an applicable
self-insured health plan includes a plan established
or maintained by one or more employers for the
benefit of their employees or former employees.
2 Archer Medical Savings Accounts (Archer
MSAs) under section 220(d) and Health Savings
Accounts (HSAs) under section 223(d) are taxfavored trusts for the purpose of paying the
qualified medical expenses of the account
beneficiary. Archer MSAs and HSAs are generally
neither health insurance policies nor self-insured
health plans and thus are not subject to the taxes
under sections 4375 and 4376.
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eligible for reimbursement from an
employee’s health FSA or HRA.
Some commentators requested that if
HRAs were not excluded from the
definition of applicable self-insured
health plan, the guidance limit the fee
under section 4376 to HRAs that are not
offered in connection with a major
medical plan or permit treatment of an
HRA that is offered in connection with
a major medical plan as a single
applicable self-insured health plan to
avoid the fee applying twice with
respect to individuals covered by a
major medical plan and a related HRA.
The proposed regulations do not
exclude all health FSAs and HRAs from
the definition of an applicable selfinsured health plan under section 4376.
In response to comments, however,
these proposed regulations provide that
multiple self-insured arrangements
established and maintained by the same
plan sponsor and with the same plan
year are subject to a single fee.
Accordingly, an HRA is not subject to a
separate fee under section 4376 if the
HRA is integrated with another
applicable self-insured health plan that
provides major medical coverage,
provided that the HRA and the other
plan are established or maintained by
the same plan sponsor. However,
section 4375 imposes a separate fee on
the issuer of a specified health
insurance policy. Consistent with the
statutory structure which separates the
fee with respect to health insurance
policies from the fee with respect to
self-insured plans, the proposed
regulations provide that an HRA that is
integrated with an insured group health
plan is treated as an ‘‘applicable selfinsured health plan’’ the plan sponsor of
which is subject to the fee under section
4376, while the issuer of the group
insurance policy for the insured group
health plan is subject to the fee under
section 4375, even though the HRA and
the insured group health plan are
maintained by the same plan sponsor.
These proposed regulations reflect the
special rule in section 4375(c)(2), which
is carried over to self-insured
arrangements through the definition of
‘‘accident and health coverage’’ in
section 4377(a)(1), that a specified
health insurance policy does not
include any insurance if substantially
all of its coverage is of excepted benefits
described in section 9832(c). The
proposed regulations provide that a
health FSA that satisfies the
requirements of an excepted benefit
under section 9832(c) is excluded from
the definition of an ‘‘applicable selfinsured health plan’’ and therefore is
not subject to the fee imposed by section
4376. (See § 54.9831–1(c)(3)(v), relating
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to additional rules on health FSAs that
are excepted benefits.) A health FSA
that does not satisfy the requirements to
be treated as an excepted benefit is an
applicable self-insured health plan
subject to the fee imposed by section
4376 (and, for purposes of the rules in
the preceding paragraph, is treated the
same as an integrated HRA).
In addition, to address the concerns
raised about the availability of
information on the lives covered under
an HRA or health FSA, the proposed
regulations contain a special rule
permitting the plan sponsor to assume
one covered life for each employee with
an HRA and for each employee with a
health FSA that is not an excepted
benefit.
Commentators also requested that an
employee assistance program (EAP) or
wellness arrangement be exempt from
the fee. Commentators argued that
generally, under an EAP or wellness
arrangement, benefits for medical care
are secondary or incidental to nonmedical benefits. In response, these
proposed regulations exclude from the
definition of applicable self-insured
health plan an EAP, disease
management program, or wellness
program, if the program does not
provide significant benefits in the
nature of medical care or treatment.
For each type of applicable selfinsured health plan identified in section
4376(c), the plan sponsor is the person
responsible for the payment of the fee.
Section 4376(b)(2) provides that in the
case of a plan established or maintained
by a single employer, the plan sponsor
is the employer, and in the case of a
plan established or maintained by a
single employee organization, the plan
sponsor is the employee organization.
Section 4376 does not contain rules that
would treat related entities as a single
entity. Accordingly, for example, under
these proposed regulations, a plan that
is maintained by multiple related
employers is not a plan that is
established or maintained by a single
employer, but, for section 4376
purposes, is considered a plan that is
established or maintained by two or
more employers.
In the case of a plan maintained by
two or more employers, the proposed
regulations provide that the plan
sponsor is the person identified as the
plan sponsor by the terms of the
document under which the plan is
operated, or the employer designated as
the plan sponsor for purposes of section
4376 by the terms of the document
under which the plan is operated
(provided that such designation is
made, and that employer has consented
to the designation, by no later than the
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due date of the return under section
4376 for that plan year is required to be
filed, after which date such designation
for that plan year may not be changed
or revoked, and provided further that an
employer may be designated as the plan
sponsor only if that employer is one of
the employers maintaining the plan). In
the absence of the identification or
designation of a plan sponsor by the
terms of the document under which the
plan is operated, the proposed
regulations provide that the plan
sponsor is each employer that maintains
the plan (with respect to employees of
that employer). Because the plan
sponsor may be designated on or before
the due date for filing the Form 720,
‘‘Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,’’
for the plan year, and under these
proposed regulations the first potential
due date for filing the Form 720 is July
31, 2013, this rule provides related
employers that provide coverage for
their employees under a single plan
ample time to designate a plan sponsor
if the employers wish to consolidate the
filing and the payment of the fee under
section 4376. In the absence of
designation of a plan sponsor in the
governing plan document, the proposed
regulations provide that the plan
sponsor is each employer that maintains
the plan (with respect to employees of
that employer), and therefore each
employer would be required to file its
own Form 720, reflecting the section
4376 fee applicable to that employer as
a plan sponsor with respect to its
employees.
As discussed in Notice 2011–35 and
earlier in the section of this preamble
entitled ‘‘Statutory Provisions,’’ section
4377(b) provides that the fee imposed
by section 4376 applies to a
governmental entity that establishes or
maintains an applicable self-insured
health plan (other than a plan that
qualifies as an exempt governmental
program) for its employees. These
proposed regulations provide that a
governmental entity that establishes or
maintains an applicable self-insured
health plan for its current or former
employees is the plan sponsor for
purposes of the fee imposed by section
4376. Thus, these proposed regulations
require that a governmental entity
(including a Federally recognized
Indian tribal government) that
establishes or maintains an applicable
self-insured health plan (other than a
plan that qualifies as an exempt
governmental program) must calculate,
report, and pay the fee under section
4376 in accordance with the guidance in
these proposed regulations.
Several commentators requested that
the guidance clarify that, in the case of
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an applicable self-insured health plan
that is established or maintained by a
board of trustees, plan assets (for
example, amounts held in a trust) or the
employer contributions to the plan
could be used to pay the fee under
section 4376. Because the use of plan
assets to pay the fee under section 4376
may have implications under various
state and Federal laws (including, for
example, ERISA’s fiduciary provisions),
the question of what the permissible
sources of funds are for paying the fee
under section 4376 is an issue that is
outside the scope of these proposed
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS have consulted the
Department of Labor concerning
comments on the appropriate sources to
pay the fee under section 4376. The
Department of Labor has advised the
Treasury Department and the IRS that it
is considering permissible funding
sources for these fee payments by plan
sponsors that are subject to ERISA’s
fiduciary provisions.
Calculation of the Fee Under Section
4375
The fee imposed on an issuer of a
specified health insurance policy under
section 4375 is based on the average
number of lives covered under the
policy. Notice 2011–35 invited
comments on reasonable methods an
issuer may use to determine the average
number of lives covered under a policy.
Notice 2011–35 also invited comments
on whether guidance should provide a
safe harbor for issuers that are required
to file the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)
Supplemental Health Care Exhibit
(Exhibit). In particular, the Treasury
Department and the IRS outlined a
potential safe harbor based on the
number of lives reported on the most
recently filed Exhibit or based on the
average of the covered lives reported on
the most recently filed Exhibit and the
immediately preceding Exhibit.
Commentators generally favored a
safe harbor that allows issuers to
calculate the average number of lives
covered under the policy based on data
reported on the Exhibit but expressed
concerns with exclusive reliance upon
covered lives data on the Exhibit.
According to the instructions to the
Exhibit, the term ‘‘covered lives’’ means
the total number of lives insured,
including dependents, at any time
during the reporting period, which
means the Exhibit captures all lives
covered without regard to how long the
coverage lasted. Several commentators
recommended that the regulations allow
issuers to use member months data
reported in the Exhibit. The Exhibit
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defines the term ‘‘member months,’’ as
the sum of the number of lives covered
on a single day in every month.
Commentators argued that dividing the
member months data by 12 (the number
of months in a reporting period) is a
more accurate measure of the average
number of lives covered because it
better reflects that some individuals
may only be insured for part of the year.
Commentators noted that some
entities are not required to file the
Exhibit, but must provide comparable
forms to their applicable state
regulators. Commentators recommended
that the proposed regulations permit
issuers to use information included in
any other report filed with a state
government.
Some commentators suggested that
the regulations allow issuers to
determine the average number of lives
covered by counting the actual number
of lives covered during the policy year.
Other commentators requested that the
regulations allow the use of any
reasonable formula or other method to
determine the average number of lives
covered, including a formula or method
that historically has been used by the
issuer for other business purposes.
The proposed regulations provide
issuers the choice of using any of four
alternative methods to determine the
average number of lives covered under
policies that it issues for purposes of the
fee imposed by section 4375. First, an
issuer may determine the average
number of lives covered under a policy
for a policy year by calculating the sum
of lives covered for each day of the
policy year and dividing that sum by the
number of days in the policy year (the
actual count method). Second, an issuer
may determine the average number of
lives covered under a policy for a policy
year by adding the total number of lives
covered on one date in each quarter of
the policy year, or an equal number of
dates for each quarter, and dividing the
total by the number of dates on which
a count was made (the snapshot
method). Third, as an alternative to
determining the average number of lives
covered under each individual policy
for its respective policy year, an issuer
may determine the average number of
lives covered under all policies in effect
for a calendar year based on the
‘‘member months’’ reported on the
Exhibit divided by 12 (the member
months method). Fourth, an issuer that
is not required to file the Exhibit may
determine the average number of lives
covered under all of its policies in effect
for a calendar year using data in any
form that is equivalent to the Exhibit
that is filed with the state of domicile
if the state form reports lives covered in
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the same manner as member months is
reported on the Exhibit (the state form
method). For this purpose, an
equivalent form includes only a form
that reports all the lives covered under
the policy (including, for example,
spouses, dependents, and other
beneficiaries, as applicable).
The proposed regulations direct an
issuer to apply a single method in
determining the average number of lives
covered under the policy for the year. In
addition, issuers must use the same
method of counting lives for all policies
reported on a single return. Issuers
using the actual count or snapshot
method may change to the snapshot or
actual count method from one policy
year to the next. For example, an issuer
with a policy that has a policy year that
ends on June 30, Policy A, may
determine lives covered under Policy A
for July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2014, using
the actual count method if the issuer
uses the actual count method for all
policies for which a liability will be
reported on the Form 720, ‘‘Quarterly
Federal Excise Tax Return,’’ due by July
31, 2015 (the due date for the return that
will include the July 2013 to June 2014
policy year for Policy A, as discussed in
the section of this preamble entitled
‘‘Application of Excise Tax Procedural
Rules (Filing of Returns and Payment of
Fees’’)). The issuer may change its
method for determining lives covered
under Policy A to the snapshot method
for the July 1, 2014, to June 30, 2015
policy year, provided that the snapshot
method is used for all policies for which
a liability will be reported on the return
due by July 31, 2016 (the due date for
the return that will include the July
2014 to June 2015 policy year for Policy
A).
While the actual count and snapshot
methods count lives covered on a
policy-by-policy basis for each policy
having a policy year that ends in the
reporting period (which is based on the
calendar year), the member months and
state form methods count all lives
covered during the calendar year for all
policies in effect during the calendar
year irrespective of when actual policy
years end. For example, for a policy
with a policy year that ends on June 30,
member months will include lives
covered under that policy from January
1 to December 31 and aggregate those
lives covered with all other lives
covered for the calendar year under all
policies in effect during the calendar
year. To convert the lives covered from
the member months to the total lives
covered under a particular policy for a
policy year is administratively
burdensome. Accordingly, the proposed
regulations provide that an issuer using
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the member months or state form
method must use that method for all
policies for all years for which the fee
applies. The Treasury Department and
the IRS solicit comments on whether
there should be an exception to this rule
for issuers of calendar-year only policies
who want to switch from the member
months or state form method to the
actual count or snapshot method and, if
so, how to address the transition in
methods for the 2012 and 2019 calendar
years.
Commentators noted that for 2012 and
2019 a partial year adjustment will be
needed because the member months
data, which uses the calendar year for
all policies, will include in the member
months for 2012 and 2019 lives covered
under policies with a policy year that
ends before October 1, 2012, or after
September 30, 2019, which are policies
to which the fee under section 4375
does not apply. The Treasury
Department and the IRS also understand
that the data reported on state forms is
generally also based on the calendar
year. To adjust for 2012 and 2019, the
proposed regulations adopt a pro rata
approach for calculating the average
number of lives covered using the
member months method or the state
form method for 2012 and 2019. For
example, the member months number
for 2012 is divided by 12 and the
resulting number is multiplied by onequarter to arrive at the average number
of lives covered for October through
December 2012. The proposed
regulations further treat the amount
calculated under this pro rata approach
as the average number of lives covered
for policies with policy years that end
on or after October 1, 2012, and before
January 1, 2013. Similar rules are
provided for 2019.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
understand that these proposed
regulations are being issued after the
beginning of some policy years to which
the fee under section 4375 will apply.
Because issuers that do not use the
member months method or state form
method may not have started counting
lives covered for policy years that end
on or after October 1, 2012, but that
began before May 14, 2012, issuers
using the actual count method may
begin counting lives covered under a
policy as of May 14, 2012 rather than
the first day of the policy year, and
divide by the appropriate number of
days remaining in the policy year.
Similarly, for policy years that end on
or after October 1, 2012, but that began
before May 14, 2012, issuers using the
snapshot method may use counts from
quarters beginning on or after May 14,
2012 to determine the average number
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of lives covered under the policy. The
Treasury Department and the IRS intend
for these rules to facilitate compliance
for the initial policy years covered by
section 4375. Comments are requested
as to whether any additional transition
rules under section 4375 are needed for
this purpose.
Calculation of the Fee Under Section
4376
The fee imposed on a plan sponsor of
an applicable self-insured health plan
under section 4376 is based on the
average number of lives covered under
the plan. Notice 2011–35 invited
comments on reasonable methods that
could reduce administrative burdens on
plan sponsors that must compute the
average number of lives covered under
an applicable self-insured health plan.
Notice 2011–35 also invited comments
on safe harbors that would permit a plan
sponsor to determine the average
number of covered lives under the plan
using a formula based on the number of
participants and one or more additional
factors that account for the number of
dependents without requiring that every
actual dependent covered under the
plan be counted.
Commentators generally favored using
reasonable simplifying methods and
safe harbors to determine the average
number of lives covered under the plan.
Some commentators suggested that the
guidance permit the use of snapshot
data to determine the number of lives
taken into account for calculating the
average number of lives covered during
the plan year. Commentators also
suggested that plan sponsors be
permitted to determine the average
number of lives covered during the year
based on information reported on the
plan’s Form 5500, ‘‘Annual Return/
Report of Employee Benefit Plan.’’
Commentators generally recognized
that a method that is based on Form
5500 reporting will have limited
application because the requirement to
file a Form 5500 does not apply to all
plan sponsors that are subject to the fee
under section 4376. These
commentators also noted that the Form
5500 does not include information on
the number of lives (participants and
dependents) covered under the plan
during the plan year, but rather includes
information only on the number of
participants on the first day and last day
of the plan year. Accordingly, the
information reported on the Form 5500
would need to be converted to a number
that accurately represents the average
number of covered lives under the plan
for the plan year.
To make it easier for plan sponsors to
determine the average number of lives
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covered under the plan for the plan
year, these proposed regulations provide
plan sponsors a choice to use any of
three alternative methods. First, a plan
sponsor may determine the average
number of lives covered under the plan
for the plan year by calculating the sum
of the lives covered for each day of the
plan year and dividing that sum by the
number of days in the plan year (the
actual count method). Second, a plan
sponsor may determine the average
number of lives covered under the plan
for the plan year by adding the totals of
lives covered on one date in each
quarter, or an equal number of dates for
each quarter, and dividing the total by
the number of dates on which a count
was made (the snapshot method). For
this purpose, the number of lives
covered on a date may be determined as
equal to either the sum of the actual
number of lives covered on the dates
(the snapshot count method) or the sum
of (1) the number of participants with
self-only coverage on that date, plus (2)
the product of the number of
participants with coverage other than
self-only coverage on the date and 2.35
(the snapshot factor method).3 The
Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on additional sources
of data that could be used to calculate
a more accurate conversion factor.
Third, a plan sponsor may determine
the average number of lives covered
under the plan for the plan year based
on a formula that includes the number
of participants actually reported on the
Form 5500 for the applicable selfinsured health plan for the plan year
(the Form 5500 method). For a plan
providing only self-only coverage, under
the Form 5500 method the plan sponsor
may treat the average number of covered
lives under the plan for a plan year as
the sum of the total participants at the
beginning and the end of the plan year,
in each case as reported on the Form
5500, divided by two.
For plans providing coverage that is
not limited to the self-only coverage, the
Form 5500 does not identify whether
the coverage is self-only or family (or
some other non-self-only coverage).
Therefore, the number of participants
reported on the Form 5500 generally is
converted to covered lives by
multiplying the number of participants
on each date by a factor of 2.0. (This
3 The 2.35 dependency factor reflects that all
participants with coverage other than self-only have
coverage for themselves and some number of
dependents. The Treasury Department and the IRS
developed the factor, and other similar factors used
in the regulations, in consultation with Treasury
Department economists and in consultation with
plan sponsors regarding the procedures they
currently use for estimating the number of covered
individuals.
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factor is lower than the 2.35 factor used
in the snapshot factor method because
this factor takes into account
participants with self-only coverage that
covers one life, as well as participants
with other coverage that covers two or
more lives.) Accordingly, under the
Form 5500 method for plans that
provide coverage not limited to self-only
coverage, a plan sponsor may simply
add the number of participants reported
for the beginning of the plan year to the
number reported for the end of the plan
year to determine the average number of
covered lives for the plan year. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on additional sources
of data that could be used to calculate
a more accurate conversion factor.
The proposed regulations direct a
plan sponsor to apply a single method
in determining the average number of
lives covered under the plan for the
entire plan year. However, a plan
sponsor is not required to use the same
method from one plan year to the next.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
understand that these proposed
regulations are being issued after the
beginning of some plan years to which
the fee under section 4376 will apply.
Therefore, these proposed regulations
include a special rule for the fee under
section 4376 applicable for a plan year
that ends on or after October 1, 2012,
and began before July 11, 2012. Because
self-insured plans generally are not
required to complete the Exhibit or
determine the number of covered lives
for other regulatory purposes, under this
special rule, a plan sponsor may use any
reasonable method to determine the
average number of lives covered under
the plan for purposes of calculating the
fee under section 4376 for those plan
years. For more information about the
return filing requirements and payment
of the fees, see the section in this
preamble entitled ‘‘Application of
Excise Tax Procedural Rules (Filing of
Returns and Payment of Fees).’’
Application of Subtitle F
In accordance with section 4377(c),
references in subtitle F (section 6001–
7874) to ‘‘taxes imposed by this title,’’
‘‘internal revenue tax,’’ and similar
references apply to the fees imposed by
sections 4375 and 4376. For example,
the fees imposed by sections 4375 and
4376 are assessed pursuant to section
6201, collected pursuant to sections
6301, 6321, and 6331, enforced
pursuant to section 7602, subject to
examination and summons pursuant to
section 7602, and subject to
confidentiality rules pursuant to section
6103, in the same manner as other taxes
imposed by the Code.
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Sections 4375 and 4376 are in chapter
34 of the Code (Taxes on Certain
Insurance Policies). The deficiency
procedures of sections 6211–6216 apply
only to income, estate, and gift taxes
imposed by subtitle A (Income Taxes)
and B (Estate and Gift Taxes) and the
excise taxes imposed by chapters 41–44.
Because sections 4375 and 4376 are in
chapter 34, the deficiency procedures
do not apply to the fee. Thus, the IRS
may assess and collect the fees using the
procedures in subtitle F without regard
to the restrictions on assessment in
section 6213 (relating to petitions to the
Tax Court).
Application of Excise Tax Procedural
Rules (Filing of Returns and Payment of
Fees)
The Excise Tax Procedural
Regulations in 26 CFR part 40 contain
rules for depositing, paying, and return
filing for a number of excise taxes,
including the excise taxes in chapter 34.
Under existing rules for chapter 34
excise taxes, taxpayers pay and report
these taxes quarterly on Form 720,
‘‘Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,’’
by the last day of the first calendar
month following the calendar quarter
for which it is filed. The proposed
regulations amend this rule so that
issuers and plan sponsors will report
and pay the section 4375 and 4376 fees
only once a year on Form 720, which
will be due by July 31 of each year. A
person that files a Form 720 only to
report liability imposed by section 4375
or 4376 is not required to file a Form
720 at other times during the year. A
return will generally cover policy years
(section 4375) and plan years (section
4376) that end during the preceding
calendar year, or in the case of an issuer
that determines the average number of
lives covered for purposes of section
4375 using the member months method
or the state form method, the return is
for all policies in effect during the
previous calendar year. The instructions
for Form 720 inform filers how and
when to file and pay. These instructions
require that the filer (the issuer or plan
sponsor, as applicable) have an
Employer Identification Number (EIN)
to use in filing the Form 720.
Most excise taxes reported on Form
720 are required to be deposited
semimonthly. However, these proposed
regulations do not require semimonthly
deposits of the fee imposed by section
4375 or 4376; rather, full payment of the
fee is due annually by the July 31 due
date of Form 720.
Any claim for a refund of the section
4375 or 4376 fees must be filed on Form
8849, ‘‘Claim for Refund of Excise
Taxes,’’ or Form 720X, ‘‘Amended
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Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,’’
in accordance with the instructions for
those forms.
These proposed regulations do not
impose any specific recordkeeping
requirements for calculating the fees
under sections 4375 and 4376. However,
see the instructions for Form 720 for
general information on recordkeeping
requirements.
The IRS will revise the current Form
720 to reflect these fees.
Electronic Filing of Returns
Form 720 may be filed electronically.
For more information on e-file, see
www.irs.gov/efile. Although electronic
filing of the Form 720, ‘‘Quarterly
Federal Excise Tax Return,’’ is not
required, the IRS encourages taxpayers
to file the Form 720 electronically.
Electronic filing of Form 720 is quick
and easy, and it will allow the IRS to
provide expedited and improved service
and reliability to taxpayers while
reducing processing time and errors.
Forms 720 can be submitted on-line. A
taxpayer wishing to file the Form 720
electronically must submit it through an
approved transmitter software
developer. The IRS has posted on its
Web site contact information for all
approved Form 720 e-file transmitters at
https://www.irs.gov/efile/lists/
0,,id=176152,00.html. To electronically
file the Form 720, taxpayers will incur
the cost of the provider’s required
service fee for online submission.
Third-Party Reporting and Payments
Notice 2011–35 requested comments
on the ability of third parties to act on
behalf of a plan sponsor in complying
with the requirements of the fee under
section 4376. A number of
commentators suggested that guidance
should permit third parties to act on
behalf of a plan sponsor in reporting
and paying the fee. Most of these
commentators requested that the
Treasury Department and the IRS
establish a special reporting and filing
regime for third parties that is different
than the regime for plan sponsors.
Although the IRS has established
limited third-party reporting and
payment regimes in certain instances
(see for example, Rev. Proc. 2007–38
(2007–1 CB 1442)) the IRS does not
intend to adopt such a program for the
fee under section 4375 or the fee under
section 4376 because the benefits of
such a program would be outweighed by
the administrative burdens, particularly
given the limited period over which the
fee will apply. See § 601.601(d)(2).
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Proposed Effective Date
These regulations are proposed to
apply to policy and plan years ending
on or after October 1, 2012, and before
October 1, 2019. Issuers and plan
sponsors may rely on these proposed
regulations for guidance pending the
issuance of final regulations. Final
regulations will be effective as of the
date these proposed regulations are
published in the Federal Register. If and
to the extent future guidance is more
restrictive than the guidance in these
proposed regulations, the future
guidance will be applied without
retroactive effect.
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this notice
of proposed rulemaking is not a
significant regulatory action as defined
in Executive Order 12866, as
supplemented by Executive Order
13653. Therefore, a regulatory
assessment is not required. It is hereby
certified that these proposed regulations
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. This certification is based on
the fact that small businesses generally
do not have self-insured health plans
and that these regulations will therefore
primarily affect large corporations.
Therefore, a Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) is
not required. The Treasury Department
and the IRS specifically solicit
comments from any party, particularly
affected small entities, on the accuracy
of this certification. Pursuant to section
7805(f) of the Code, this notice of
proposed rulemaking has been
submitted to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comments on its
impact on small business.
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Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are
adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any
written or electronic comments that are
submitted timely to the IRS. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on all aspects of the
proposed rules. All comments will be
available for public inspection and
copying.
A public hearing has been scheduled
for August 8, 2012, beginning at 10 a.m.
in room the auditorium of the Internal
Revenue Building, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC. Due to
building security procedures, visitors
must enter at the Constitution Avenue
entrance. In addition, all visitors must
present photo identification to enter the
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building. Because of access restrictions,
visitors will not be admitted beyond the
immediate entrance more than 15
minutes before the hearing starts. For
information about having your name
placed on the building access list to
attend the hearing, see the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
preamble.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3)
apply to the hearing. Persons who wish
to present oral comments at the hearing
must submit written or electronic
comments and an outline of the topics
to be discussed and the time to be
devoted to each topic by July 30, 2012.
A period of 10 minutes will be allotted
to each person for making comments.
An agenda showing the scheduling of
the speakers will be prepared after the
deadline for receiving outlines has
passed. Copies of the agenda will be
available free of charge at the hearing.
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these
regulations are Rebecca L. Baxter, Office
of Associate Chief Counsel (Financial
Institutions & Products), and R. Lisa
Mojiri-Azad, Office of Division Counsel/
Associate Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt
and Government Entities). However,
other personnel from the Treasury
Department and the IRS participated in
their development.
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 40
Excise taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
26 CFR Part 46
Excise taxes, Insurance, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR parts 40 and 46
are proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 40—EXCISE TAX PROCEDURAL
REGULATIONS
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 40 continues to read in part as
follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 40.0–1 is amended as
follows:
1. Paragraph (a) is amended by
removing from the third sentence the
language ‘‘chapter 34 to taxes imposed
on policies issued by foreign insurers’’
and adding ‘‘chapter 34 to taxes
imposed on certain insurance policies’’
in its place, and adding a new sentence
after the third sentence to read as
follows:
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§ 40.0–1
22699
Introduction.
(a) * * * References in this part to
‘‘taxes’’ also include references to the
fees imposed by sections 4375 and 4376.
* * *
*
*
*
*
*
Par. 3. Section 40.6011(a)–1 is
amended by:
1. In paragraph (a)(2)(i), first sentence,
the language ‘‘paragraph (b) of this
section’’ is removed and the language
‘‘paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section’’
is added in its place.
2. Paragraph (c) is added.
The addition reads as follows:
§ 40.6011(a)–1
Returns.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Fees on health insurance policies
and self-insured health plans—(1) In
general. A return that reports liability
imposed by section 4375 or 4376 is a
return for policies or plans with policy
or plan years ending in the previous
calendar year, or for issuers that
determine the average number of lives
covered under a policy for purposes of
section 4375 using the member months
method under § 46.4375–1(c)(2)(v) of
this chapter or the state form method
under § 46.4375–1(c)(2)(vi) of this
chapter, the return is for all policies in
effect during the previous calendar year.
The second sentence of paragraph
(a)(2)(i) of this section (relating to filing
quarterly returns regardless of whether
liability is incurred) does not apply to
a person that files a Form 720,
‘‘Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,’’
only to report liability imposed by
section 4375 or 4376.
(2) Effective/applicability date. This
paragraph (c) is applicable on April 17,
2012. This paragraph (c) applies to
returns that report liability imposed by
section 4375 or 4376 for all policies and
plans to which section 4375 or 4376
applies.
Par. 4. Section 40.6071(a)–1 is
amended as follows:
1. Paragraph (c) is revised.
2. Paragraph (d) is added.
The revision and addition read as
follows:
§ 40.6071(a)–1
*
Time for filing returns.
*
*
*
*
(c) Fees on health insurance policies
and self-insured health plans. A return
that reports liability for the fee imposed
by section 4375 must be filed by July 31
of the calendar year immediately
following the last day of the policy year.
For issuers that determine the average
number of lives covered under the
policy for section 4375 using the
member months method under
§ 46.4375–1(c)(2)(v) of this chapter or
the state form method under § 46.4375–
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1(c)(2)(vi) of this chapter, the return
must be filed by July 31 of the
immediately following calendar year. A
return that reports liability for the fee
imposed by section 4376 for a plan year
must be filed by July 31 of the calendar
year immediately following the last day
of the plan year. Thus, for example, a
return that reports liability for the fee
imposed by section 4375 for the year
ending on December 31, 2012, must be
filed by July 31, 2013. As another
example, a return that reports liability
for the fee imposed by section 4376 for
the plan year ending on January 31,
2013, must be filed by July 31, 2014.
(d) Effective/applicability date.
Paragraph (c) of this section is
applicable on April 17, 2012.
Paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section
apply to returns for calendar quarters
beginning on or after October 1, 2001,
and paragraph (c) of this section applies
to returns that report liability imposed
by section 4375 or 4376 for all policies
and plans to which section 4375 or 4376
applies.
§ 40.6091–1
[Amended]
Par. 5. Section 40.6091–1(a) is
amended by removing the language
‘‘paragraph (b) of this section, quarterly
returns’’ and by adding the language
‘‘paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section,
returns’’ in its place.
Par. 6. Section 40.6302(c)–1 is
amended by revising the section
heading and paragraph (e)(1)(iv) to read
as follows:
§ 40.6302(c)–1
depositaries.
Use of Government
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Sections 4375 and 4376 (relating
to fees on health insurance policies and
self-insured health plans).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 46—EXCISE TAX ON CERTAIN
INSURANCE POLICIES AND
OBLIGATIONS NOT IN REGISTERED
FORM
Par. 7. The authority citation for part
46 continues to read in part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *
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Par. 8. In Part 46, the heading is
revised to read as set forth above.
§ 46.0–1
[Amended]
Par. 9. In § 46.0–1, first sentence, the
language ‘‘policies issued by foreign
insurers’’ is removed and the language
‘‘certain insurance policies’’ is added in
its place.
§ 46.0–2
[Removed]
Par. 10. Section 46.0–2 is removed.
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Par. 11. In Part 46, subpart C is
redesignated as subpart D and a new
subpart C is added to read as follows:
Subpart C—Fees on Insured and SelfInsured Health Plans
Sec
46.4375–1 Fee on issuers of specified health
insurance policies.
46.4376–1 Fee on sponsors of self-insured
health plans.
46.4377–1 Definitions and special rules.
Subpart C—Fees on Insured and SelfInsured Health Plans
§ 46.4375–1 Fee on issuers of specified
health insurance policies.
(a) In general. An issuer of a specified
health insurance policy is liable for a fee
imposed by section 4375 for policy
years ending on or after October 1, 2012,
and before October 1, 2019. Paragraph
(b) of this section provides definitions
that apply for purposes of section 4375
and this section. Paragraph (c) of this
section provides rules for calculating
the fee under section 4375. Paragraph
(d) of this section provides the effective/
applicability date. For rules relating to
filing the required return and paying the
fee, see §§ 40.6011(a)–1 and 40.6151(a)–
1 of this chapter.
(b) Definitions. The following
definitions apply for purposes of section
4375 and this section. See also
§ 46.4377–1 for additional definitions.
(1) Specified health insurance
policy—(i) In general. Except as
provided in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section and § 46.4377–1, specified
health insurance policy means any
accident or health insurance policy
(including a policy under a group health
plan) issued with respect to individuals
residing in the United States (as defined
in § 46.4377–1(a)(2)), including certain
prepaid health coverage arrangements as
described in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section.
(ii) Exceptions. The term specified
health insurance policy does not
include—
(A) Any insurance policy if
substantially all of its coverage is of
excepted benefits described in section
9832(c);
(B) Any group policy issued to an
employer where the facts and
circumstances show that the group
policy was designed and issued
specifically to cover primarily
employees who are working and
residing outside of the United States
(see § 46.4377–1(a)(3)); or
(C) Any stop loss or indemnity
reinsurance policy.
(iii) Stop loss policy. For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section, stop
loss policy means an insurance policy in
which—
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(A) The insurer that issues the policy
to a person establishing or maintaining
a self-insured health plan becomes
liable for all, or an agreed upon portion
of, losses that person incurs in covering
the applicable lives in excess of a
specified amount; and
(B) The person establishing or
maintaining the self-insured health plan
retains its liability to, and its contractual
relationship with, the applicable lives
covered.
(iv) Indemnity reinsurance policy. For
purposes of paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section, indemnity reinsurance policy
means an agreement between two or
more insurance companies under
which—
(A) The reinsuring company agrees to
accept and to indemnify the issuing
company for all or part of the risk of loss
under policies specified in the
agreement; and
(B) The issuing company retains its
liability to, and its contractual
relationship with, the applicable lives
covered.
(2) Prepaid health coverage
arrangement. The term prepaid health
coverage arrangement means an
arrangement under which fixed
payments or premiums are received as
consideration for a person’s agreement
to provide or arrange for the provision
of accident or health coverage to
individuals residing in the United
States, regardless of how such coverage
is provided or arranged to be provided.
For example, any hospital or medical
service policy or certificate, hospital or
medical service plan contract, or health
maintenance organization contract is a
specified health insurance policy.
(c) Calculation of fee—(1) In general.
The amount of the fee for a policy for
a policy year is equal to the product of
the average number of lives covered
under the policy for the policy year
(determined in accordance with
paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of this
section) and the applicable dollar
amount (determined in accordance with
paragraph (c)(4) of this section). For
purposes of computing the fee under
this paragraph (c), in the case of an
issuer that determines the average
number of lives covered for all policies
in effect during a calendar year using
the member months method under
paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this section or the
state form method under paragraph
(c)(2)(vi) of this section, the applicable
dollar amount with respect to such
issuer’s policies for such calendar year
is the applicable dollar amount for
policy years ending on December 31 of
such calendar year (determined in
accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this
section), except that the applicable
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dollar amount with respect to such an
issuer’s policies for calendar year 2019
shall be the applicable dollar amount for
policy years ending on September 30,
2019. For more information, see the
examples in paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(B),
(c)(2)(iv)(B), (c)(2)(v)(B), and (c)(2)(vi)(B)
of this section.
(2) Determination of the average
number of lives covered under a
policy—(i) In general. To determine the
average number of lives covered under
a specified health insurance policy
during a policy year, an issuer must use
one of the following methods—
(A) The actual count method
(described in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this
section);
(B) The snapshot method (described
in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section);
(C) The member months method
(described in paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this
section); or
(D) The state form method (described
in paragraph (c)(2)(vi) of this section).
(ii) Consistency requirements. An
issuer must use the same method of
calculating the average number of lives
covered under a policy consistently for
the duration of the year. In addition, for
all policies for which a liability is
reported on a Form 720, ‘‘Quarterly
Federal Excise Tax Return,’’ for a
particular year, the issuer must use the
same method of computing lives
covered. An issuer that determines the
average number of lives covered by
using the actual count method described
in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section or
the snapshot method described in
paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section may
change its method of computing the
average lives covered to the snapshot
method or actual count method,
provided that the issuer uses the same
method for computing the average lives
covered for all policies for which a
liability is reported on the Form 720 for
that year. For example, an issuer with a
policy having a policy year that ends on
June 30, Policy A, may determine the
average number of lives covered under
Policy A for July 1, 2013, to June 30,
2014, using the actual count method if
the issuer uses the actual count method
for all policies for which a liability will
be reported on the Form 720 due by July
31, 2015 (the due date for return that
will include the liability for the July
2013 to June 2014 policy year for Policy
A). The issuer may change its method
for determining the average number of
lives covered under Policy A to the
snapshot method for the July 1, 2014, to
June 30, 2015, policy year, provided that
the snapshot method is used for all
policies for which a liability will be
reported on the Form 720 due by July
31, 2016 (the due date for return that
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Jkt 226001
will include the liability for the July
2014 to June 2015 policy year for Policy
A). An issuer that determines the
average number of lives covered by
using the member months method
under paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this section
or the state form method under
paragraph (c)(2)(vi) of this section must
use the same method for calculating
lives covered for all policy years for
which the fee applies.
(iii) Actual count method—(A)
Calculation method. An issuer may
determine the average number of lives
covered under a policy for a policy year
by adding the total number of lives
covered for each day of the policy year
and dividing that total by the number of
days in the policy year.
(B) Example. The following example
illustrates the principles of paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(2)(iii)(A) of this section:
22701
determine the average number of lives
covered under a policy for a policy year
by adding the totals of lives covered on
one date in each quarter of the policy
year, or more dates if an equal number
of dates is used for each quarter, and
dividing that total by the number of
dates on which a count was made. For
this purpose, the date or dates for each
quarter must be the same (for example,
the first day of the quarter, the last day
of the quarter, or the first day of each
month).
(B) Example. The following example
illustrates the principles of paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(2)(iv)(A) of this section:
Example. Insurance Company A issues
three policies that are in effect during 2014,
Group Health Insurance Policy A, which has
a policy year from December 1 to November
30, Group Health Insurance Policy B, which
has a policy year from March 1 to February
28, and Group Health Insurance Policy C,
which has a policy year from January 1 to
December 31. To calculate the average
number of lives covered for 2014, Insurance
Company A must calculate the average
number of lives covered for each of its three
policies for the policy year that ends in 2014.
Insurance Company A chooses to use the
actual count method under paragraph
(c)(2)(iii)(A) of this section to determine
average lives covered for policies having a
policy year that ends in 2014. Insurance
Company A calculates the sum of lives
covered under Policy A for each day of the
policy year ending November 30, 2014, as
3,285,000. The average number of lives
covered under Policy A for the policy year
ending November 30, 2014, is 3,285,000
divided by 365, or 9,000. Insurance Company
A calculates the sum of lives covered under
Policy B for each day of the policy year
ending February 28, 2014, as 547,500. The
average number of lives covered under Policy
B for the policy year ending on February 28,
2014, is 547,500 divided by 365, or 1,500.
Insurance Company A calculates the sum of
lives covered under Policy C for each day of
the policy year ending December 31, 2014, as
4,380,000. The average number of lives
covered under Policy C for the policy year
ending December 31, 2014, is 4,380,000
divided by 365, or 12,000. To calculate the
section 4375 fee under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section for calendar year 2014, Insurance
Company A must first determine the
applicable dollar amount for each policy
under paragraph (c)(4) of this section and
multiply that amount by the average number
of lives covered for that policy. Insurance
Company A then adds the total fees for all
three policies to determine the total fee under
section 4375 that it must pay for calendar
year 2014.
Example. Insurance Company B issues
three policies that are in effect during 2014,
Group Health Insurance Policy A, which has
a policy year from December 1 to November
30, Group Health Insurance Policy B, which
has a policy year from March 1 to February
28, and Group Health Insurance Policy C,
which has a policy year from January 1 to
December 31. To calculate the average
number of lives covered for 2014, Company
A must calculate the average number of lives
covered for each of its three policies for the
policy year that ends in 2014. Insurance
Company B chooses to determine its average
lives covered using the snapshot method for
all policies that have a policy year that ends
in 2014 and chooses to count lives covered
on the first day of each quarter of the policy
years. On December 1, 2013, Policy A covers
8,900 lives covered, on March 1, 2014, 9,100
lives covered, on June 1, 2014, 9,050 lives
covered, and on September 1, 2014, 9,050
lives covered. Insurance Company B treats
the average number of lives covered under
Policy A for the policy year ending
November 30, 2014, as 36,100 (8,900 + 9,100
+ 9,050 + 9,050) divided by 4, or 9,025. On
March 1, 2013, Policy B covers 1,500 lives
covered, on June 1, 2013, 1,350 lives covered,
on September 1, 2013, 1,400 lives covered,
and on December 1, 2013, 1,550 lives
covered. Insurance Company B treats the
average number of lives covered under Policy
B for the policy year ending February 28,
2014, as 5,800 (1,500 + 1,350 + 1,400 + 1,550)
divided by 4, or 1,450. On January 1, 2014,
Policy C covers 12,500 lives covered, on
April 1, 2014, 12,250 lives covered, on July
1, 2014, 12,000 lives covered, and on October
1, 2014, 11,250 lives covered. Insurance
Company B treats the average number of lives
covered under Policy C for the policy year
ending December 31, 2014, as 47,750 (12,500
+ 12,250 + 12,000 + 11,250) divided by 4, or
12,000. To calculate the section 4375 fee
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section for
calendar year 2014, Insurance Company B
must first determine the applicable dollar
amount for each policy under paragraph
(c)(4) of this section and multiply that
amount by the number of average lives
covered for that policy. Insurance Company
B then adds the total fees for all three
policies to determine the total fee under
section 4375 that it must pay for calendar
year 2014.
(iv) Snapshot method—(A)
Calculation method. An issuer may
(v) Member months method—(A)
Calculation method. An issuer may
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determine the average number of lives
covered under all policies in effect for
a calendar year based on the member
months (an amount that equals the sum
of the totals of lives covered on prespecified days in each month of the
reporting period) reported on the
National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC) Supplemental
Health Care Exhibit filed for that
calendar year. Under this method, the
average number of lives covered under
the policies in effect for the calendar
year equals the member months divided
by 12.
(B) Example. The following example
illustrates the principles of paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(2)(v)(A) of this section:
Example. Insurance Company C chooses to
determine the average number of lives
covered for all years to which the section
4375 fee applies using the member months
method of paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A) of this
section. Insurance Company C reports
12,000,000 as its member months on the
NAIC Supplemental Health Care Exhibit filed
for calendar year 2013. Under the member
months method, Insurance Company C
calculates the average number of lives
covered for all its specified health insurance
policies in force during calendar year 2013
by dividing 12,000,000 (member months) by
12 (number of months in the reporting
period), which equals 1,000,000. To
determine the section 4375 fee it must pay
for calendar year 2013, Insurance Company
C multiplies 1,000,000 by the applicable
dollar amount that is in effect at the end of
the calendar year under paragraph (c)(4) of
this section.
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(vi) State form method—(A)
Calculation method. An issuer that is
not required to file NAIC annual
financial statements may determine the
number of lives covered under all
policies in effect for the calendar year
using a form that is filed with the
issuer’s state of domicile and a method
similar to that described in paragraph
(c)(2)(v) of this section, if the form
reports the number of lives covered in
the same manner as member months are
reported on the NAIC Supplemental
Health Care Exhibit.
(B) Example. The following example
illustrates the principles of paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(2)(vi)(A) of this section:
Example. Insurance Company D is not
required to file the NAIC Supplemental
Health Care Exhibit, but files a form with its
state of domicile. Insurance Company D
chooses to determine the average number of
lives covered for all years to which the
section 4375 fee applies using the state form
method of paragraph (c)(2)(vi)(A) of this
section. The state form reports the number of
lives covered in the same manner as member
months is reported on the NAIC
Supplemental Health Care Exhibit. For
calendar year 2013, Insurance Company D
reports 12,000,000 as its equivalent member
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Jkt 226001
months on the state form. Under the state
form method, Insurance Company D
calculates the average number of lives
covered for all of its specified health
insurance policies in force during calendar
year 2013 by dividing 12,000,000 (equivalent
member months) by 12 (number of months in
the reporting period), which equals
1,000,000. To determine the section 4375 fee
it must pay for calendar year 2013, Insurance
Company D multiplies 1,000,000 by the
applicable dollar amount that is in effect at
the end of the calendar year under paragraph
(c)(4) of this section.
(3) Special rules for the first year and
the last year the fee is in effect—(i)
Calculation of the average number of
lives covered under the policy for the
first year the fee is in effect. For issuers
that determine the average number of
lives covered using data reported on the
2012 NAIC Supplemental Health Care
Exhibit or a permitted state form that
covers the 2012 calendar year, the
average number of lives covered under
all policies in effect for the 2012
calendar year equals the average number
of lives covered for that year (as
determined under paragraph (c)(2)(v) or
(vi) of this section) multiplied by 1⁄4.
The resulting number is deemed to be
the average number of lives covered for
policies with policy years ending on or
after October 1, 2012, and before
January 1, 2013. For policy years
beginning before May 14, 2012 and
ending on or after October 1, 2012,
issuers that determine the average
number of lives covered using the actual
count method under paragraph (c)(2)(iii)
of this section may calculate the average
number of lives covered using data from
the period beginning May 14, 2012
through the end of the policy year. For
policy years beginning before May 14,
2012 and ending on or after October 1,
2012, issuers that determine the average
number of lives covered using the
snapshot method under paragraph
(c)(2)(iv) of this section may calculate
the average number of lives covered
using dates from the quarters remaining
in the policy year starting on or after
May 14, 2012. If an abbreviated year is
used, the issuer will divide the number
of lives covered by the number of days
from May 14, 2012 through the end of
the policy year (for the actual count
method) or the number of days on
which a count was made (for the
snapshot method).
(ii) Calculation of the average number
of lives covered under the policy for the
last year the fee is in effect. For issuers
that determine the average number of
lives covered using data reported on the
2019 NAIC Supplemental Health Care
Exhibit or a permitted state form that
covers the 2019 calendar year, the
average number of lives covered for all
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policies in effect during the 2019
calendar year equals the average number
of lives covered for that year (as
determined under paragraph (c)(2)(v) or
(vi) of this section) multiplied by 3⁄4.
The resulting number is deemed to be
the average number of lives covered for
policies with policy years ending on or
after January 1, 2019, and before
October 1, 2019.
(iii) Example. The following examples
illustrate the principles of paragraph
(c)(3) of this section:
Example 1. Insurance Company E issues
Group Health Insurance Policy C, which has
a policy year that ends on November 30,
2012. Insurance Company E determines the
average number of lives covered under a
policy by using the actual count method.
Under that method, for that policy year,
Insurance Company E calculates the sum of
lives covered under Policy C for each day
between May 14, 2012 and November 30,
2012 as 10,000. The average number of lives
covered under Policy C for that policy year
is 10,000 divided by the number of days from
May 14, 2012 through November 30, 2012.
Alternatively, Insurance Company E could
have counted the number of lives covered for
the entire policy year and divided the sum
by 365.
Example 2. Insurance Company F reports
12,000,000 as its member months on its NAIC
Supplemental Health Care Exhibit filed for
calendar year 2012. Under the member
months method, Insurance Company F
calculates the average number of lives
covered for 2012 by dividing 12,000,000
(member months) by 12 (number of months
in the reporting period), and then
multiplying the result (1,000,000) by 1⁄4,
which equals 250,000. Accordingly, the
average number of lives covered for policies
with policy years ending on or after October
1, 2012, and before January 1, 2013, is
250,000.
(4) Applicable dollar amount. For
policy years ending on or after October
1, 2012, and before October 1, 2013, the
applicable dollar amount is $1. For
policy years ending on or after October
1, 2013, and before October 1, 2014, the
applicable dollar amount is $2. For any
policy years ending in any fiscal year
beginning on or after October 1, 2014,
the applicable dollar amount is the sum
of—
(i) The applicable dollar amount for
the policy year ending in the previous
fiscal year; plus
(ii) The amount equal to the product
of—
(A) The applicable dollar amount for
the policy year ending in the previous
fiscal year; and
(B) The percentage increase in the
projected per capita amount of the
National Health Expenditures most
recently released by the Department of
Health and Human Services before the
beginning of the fiscal year.
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(d) Effective/applicability date. This
section is effective on April 17, 2012.
This section applies for policies with
policy years ending on or after October
1, 2012, and before October 1, 2019.
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§ 46.4376–1 Fee on sponsors of selfinsured health plans.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor of an
applicable self-insured health plan is
liable for a fee imposed by section 4376
for plans with plan years ending on or
after October 1, 2012, and before
October 1, 2019. Paragraph (b) of this
section provides the definitions that
apply for purposes of section 4376 and
this section. Paragraph (c) of this section
provides the requirements for
calculating the fee imposed by section
4376. Paragraph (d) of this section
provides the effective/applicability date.
For rules relating to filing the required
return and paying the fee, see
§§ 40.6011(a)–1 and 40.6151(a)–1 of this
chapter.
(b) Definitions. The following
definitions apply for purposes of section
4376 and this section. See § 46.4377–1
for additional definitions.
(1) Applicable self-insured health
plan—(i) In general. Except as provided
in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section and
§ 46.4377–1, applicable self-insured
health plan means a plan that provides
for accident or health coverage (within
the meaning of § 46.4377–1(a)) if any
portion of the coverage is provided
other than through an insurance policy
and the plan is established or
maintained—
(A) By one or more employers for the
benefit of their employees or former
employees;
(B) By one or more employee
organizations for the benefit of their
members or former members;
(C) Jointly by one or more employers
and one or more employee organizations
for the benefit of employees or former
employees;
(D) By a voluntary employees’
beneficiary association, as described in
section 501(c)(9);
(E) By an organization described in
section 501(c)(6); or
(F) By a multiple employer welfare
arrangement (as defined in section 3(40)
of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA)), a rural
electric cooperative (as defined in
section 3(40)(B)(iv) of ERISA), or a rural
cooperative association (as defined in
section 3(40)(B)(v) of ERISA).
(ii) Exceptions. The term applicable
self-insured health plan does not
include any of the following:
(A) A plan that provides benefits
substantially all of which are excepted
benefits, as defined in section 9832(c).
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For example, a health flexible spending
arrangement (health FSA) (as described
in section 106(c)(2)) that satisfies the
requirements to be treated as an
excepted benefit under section 9832(c)
(see also § 54.9831–1(c)(3)(v) of this
chapter) is not an applicable selfinsured health plan. A health FSA that
is not treated as an excepted benefit
under section 9832(c) is an applicable
self-insured health plan.
(B) An employee assistance program,
disease management program, or
wellness program if the program does
not provide significant benefits in the
nature of medical care or treatment.
(iii) Multiple self-insured
arrangements established or maintained
by the same plan sponsor. For purposes
of section 4376, two or more
arrangements established or maintained
by the same plan sponsor that provides
for accident and health coverage (within
the meaning of § 46.4377–1(a)) other
than through an insurance policy and
that have the same plan year may be
treated as a single applicable selfinsured health plan for purposes of
calculating the fee imposed by section
4376. For example, if a plan sponsor
establishes or maintains a self-insured
arrangement providing major medical
benefits, and a separate self-insured
arrangement with the same plan year
providing prescription drug benefits, the
two arrangements may be treated as one
applicable self-insured health plan so
that the same life covered under each
arrangement would count as only one
covered life under the plan. Similarly, if
a plan sponsor provides a Health
Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA)
that is integrated with another
applicable self-insured health plan that
provides major medical coverage, the
HRA and the major medical plan may be
treated as one applicable self-insured
health plan.
(2) Plan sponsor—(i) In general. The
term plan sponsor means—
(A) The employer, in the case of an
applicable self-insured health plan
established or maintained by a single
employer;
(B) The employee organization, in the
case of an applicable self-insured health
plan established or maintained by an
employee organization;
(C) The joint board of trustees, in the
case of a multiemployer plan (as defined
in section 414(f));
(D) The committee, in the case of a
multiple employer welfare arrangement;
(E) The cooperative or association that
establishes or maintains an applicable
self-insured health plan established or
maintained by a rural electric
cooperative (as defined in section
3(40)(B)(iv) of ERISA) or rural
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22703
cooperative association (as defined in
section 3(40)(B)(v) of ERISA);
(F) The trustee, in the case of an
applicable self-insured health plan
established or maintained by a
voluntary employees’ beneficiary
association (meaning that the voluntary
employees’ beneficiary association is
not merely serving as a funding vehicle
for a plan that is established or
maintained by an employer or other
person); or
(G) In the case of an applicable selfinsured health plan the plan sponsor of
which is not described in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i)(A) through (F) of this section,
the person identified by the terms of the
document under which the plan is
operated as the plan sponsor, or the
person designated by terms of the
document under which the plan is
operated as the plan sponsor for section
4376 purposes, provided that
designation is made, and that person
has consented to the designation, by no
later than the date by which the return
paying the fee under section 4376 for
that plan year is required to be filed,
after which date that designation for
that plan year may not be changed or
revoked, and provided further that a
person may be designated as the plan
sponsor only if the person is one of the
persons maintaining the plan (for
example, one of the employers that is
maintaining the plan with one or more
other employers or employee
organizations).
(H) In the case of an applicable selfinsured health plan the sponsor of
which is not described in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i)(A) through (F) of this section,
and for which no identification or
designation of a plan sponsor has been
made pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i)(G)
of this section, each employer that
maintains the plan (with respect to
employees of that employer), each
employee organization that maintains
the plan (with respect to members of
that employee organization), and each
board of trustees, cooperative or
association that maintains the plan,
meaning that each plan sponsor must
file a separate Form 720, ‘‘Quarterly
Federal Excise Tax Return,’’ reflecting
its separate liability under section 4376.
(ii) Example. The following examples
illustrate the principles of paragraph
(b)(2) of this section:
Example 1. Employer XYZ is a holding
company with no employees that owns all
the issued and outstanding shares of
Employer X, Employer Y, and Employer Z.
Employer X, Employer Y, and Employer Z
have established the XYZ Group Health Plan
to provide accident and health coverage,
provided other than through an insurance
policy, for the benefit of their employees. The
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XYZ Group Health Plan has a calendar year
plan year. In addition, there is no plan
sponsor identified or designated in the plan
document. As a self-insured health plan for
employees of two or more employers, the
XYZ Group Health Plan is an applicable selfinsured health plan under section
4376(c)(2)(A) and paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A) of
this section. However, a plan sponsor is not
identified or designated in the governing
plan document. Accordingly, the plan
sponsor for purposes of section 4376 is
identified under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(H) of this
section as Employer X, Employer Y, and
Employer Z, each with respect to its own
employees covered under the plan.
Accordingly, Employer X, Employer Y, and
Employer Z each must file a Form 720
reflecting their separate liabilities under
section 4376, calculated based upon lives
covered that are employees of that employer,
or spouses, dependents, or other beneficiaries
of employees of that employer and the
applicable dollar amount in effect for the
plan year.
Example 2. The same facts as Example 1,
except that the governing plan document
designates Employer X as the plan sponsor of
the XYZ Group Health Plan for purposes of
the fee under section 4376. Accordingly, the
plan sponsor for purposes of section 4376 is
identified under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(G) of this
section as Employer X. Employer X must file
a Form 720 reflecting liabilities under section
4376, calculated based upon lives covered
that are employees of Employer X, Employer
Y, or Employer Z, or spouses, dependents, or
other beneficiaries of employees of those
employers and the applicable dollar amount
in effect for the plan year.
(c) Calculation of fee—(1) In general.
The amount of the fee for a plan year is
equal to the product of the average
number of lives covered under the plan
for the plan year (determined in
accordance with paragraph (c)(2) of this
section) and the applicable dollar
amount (determined in accordance with
paragraph (c)(3) of this section). For
more information, see the examples in
paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(B), (c)(2)(iv)(D),
and (c)(2)(v)(B) of this section.
(2) Determination of the average
number of covered lives under the
plan—(i) In general. To determine the
average number of lives covered under
an applicable self-insured health plan
during a plan year, a plan sponsor must
use one of the following—
(A) The actual count method
(described in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this
section);
(B) The snapshot dates method
(described in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this
section); or
(C) The Form 5500 method (described
in paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this section).
(ii) Consistency within plan year. A
plan sponsor must use the same method
of calculating the average number of
lives covered under the plan
consistently for the duration of the plan
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year. However, a plan sponsor may use
a different method from one plan year
to the next.
(iii) Actual count method—(A)
Calculation method. A plan sponsor
may determine the average number of
lives covered under a plan for a plan
year by adding the totals of lives
covered for each day of the plan year
and dividing that total by the number of
days in the plan year.
(B) Example. The following example
illustrates the principles of paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(2)(iii)(A) of this section:
Example. Employer A is the plan sponsor
of the Employer A Self-Insured Health Plan,
which has a calendar year plan year.
Employer A calculates the sum of covered
lives under the plan for each day of the plan
year ending December 31, 2013 as 3,285,000.
The average number of covered lives under
the plan for the plan year ending December
31, 2013 is 3,285,000 divided by 365, or
9,000. To calculate the section 4376 fee for
the plan under paragraph (c)(1) of this
section for the plan year ending December
31, 2013, Employer A must determine the
applicable dollar amount under paragraph
(c)(3) of this section and multiply that
amount by the average number of lives
covered under the plan.
(iv) Snapshot methods—(A) In
general. A plan sponsor may determine
the average number of lives covered
under a plan for a plan year by adding
the totals of lives covered on one date
in each quarter, or more dates if an
equal number of dates are used for each
quarter, and dividing that total by the
number of dates on which a count was
made. For this purpose, the date or
dates for each quarter must be the same
(for example, the first day of the quarter,
the last day of the quarter, the first day
of each month, etc.). For purposes of
this paragraph (c)(2)(iv), the number of
lives covered on a designated date may
be determined using either the snapshot
factor method described in paragraph
(c)(2)(iv)(B) of this section or the
snapshot count method described in
paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(C) of this section.
(B) Snapshot factor method. Under
the snapshot factor method, the number
of lives covered on a date is equal to the
sum of the number of participants with
self-only coverage on that date, plus the
product of the number of participants
with coverage other than self-only
coverage on the date and 2.35.
(C) Snapshot count method. Under
the snapshot count method, the number
of lives covered on a date equals the
actual number of lives covered on the
designated date.
(D) Examples. The following
examples illustrate the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(iv) of this
section:
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Example 1. Employer B is the plan
sponsor of the Employer B Self-Insured
Health Plan, which has a calendar year plan
year. Employer B has designated the first day
of each quarter of the plan year as the date
that Employer B counts the covered lives
under the Employer B Self-Insured Health
Plan. On January 1, 2013, Employer B SelfInsured Health Plan covers 2,000 covered
lives, on April 1, 2013, 2,100 covered lives,
on July 1, 2013, 2,050 covered lives, and on
October 1, 2013, 2,050 covered lives. Under
the snapshot count method, Employer B must
determine the average number of covered
lives under the Employer B Self-Insured
Health Plan for the plan year ending
December 31, 2013 as 8,200 (2,000 + 2,100
+ 2,050 + 2,050) divided by 4, or 2,050. To
calculate the section 4376 fee under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section for the plan
year ending December 31, 2013, Employer B
must determine the applicable dollar amount
under paragraph (c)(3) of this section and
multiply that amount by the average number
of lives covered under the plan.
Example 2. Same facts as Example 1,
except Employer B determines the number of
covered lives not covered by self-only
coverage based on the number of participants
with coverage other than self-only multiplied
by 2.35 (the factor set forth in (c)(2)(iv) of this
section). On January 1, 2013, Employer B
Self-Insured Health Plan provides self-only
coverage to 600 employees and other than
self-only coverage to 800 employees. On
April 1, 2013, Employer B Self-Insured
Health Plan provides self-only coverage to
608 employees and other than self-only
coverage to 800 employees. On July 1, 2013
and October 1, 2013, Employer B SelfInsured Health Plan provides self-only
coverage to 610 employees and other than
self-only coverage to 809 employees. Under
the snapshot factor method, Employer B must
determine the average number of covered
lives under the Employer B Self-Insured
Health Plan for the plan year ending
December 31, 2013 as 9,988 [(600+(800 x
2.35)) + (608 + (800 x 2.35)) + (610 + (809
x 2.35)) + (610 + (809 x 2.35))] divided by 4,
or 2,497. To calculate the section 4376 fee
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section for the
plan year ending December 31, 2013,
Employer B must determine the applicable
dollar amount under paragraph (c)(3) of this
section and multiply that amount by the
average number of lives covered under the
plan.
(v) Form 5500 method—(A)
Calculation method. A plan sponsor
may determine the average number of
lives covered under a plan for a plan
year based on the number of reportable
participants for the Form 5500, ‘‘Annual
Return/Report of Employee Benefit
Plan,’’ that is filed for the applicable
self-insured health plan for that plan
year. For purposes of this paragraph
(c)(2)(v), the average number of lives
covered under the plan for the plan year
for a plan offering only self-only
coverage equals the sum of total
participants covered at the beginning
and the end of the plan year, as reported
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on the Form 5500 filed for the
applicable self-insured health plan,
divided by 2. For purposes of this
paragraph (c)(2)(v), the average number
of lives covered under the plan for the
plan year for a plan offering self-only
coverage and coverage other than selfonly coverage equals the sum of total
participants covered at the beginning
and the end of the plan year, as reported
on the Form 5500 filed for the
applicable self-insured health plan.
(B) Examples. The following
examples illustrate the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(v)(A) of this
section:
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Example 1. Employer C is the plan
sponsor of the Employer C Self-Insured
Health Plan, which has a fiscal year plan year
ending on July 31, 2013 and offers only selfonly coverage. Employer C files a Form 5500
for the Employer C Self-Insured Health Plan
for the plan year ending July 31, 2013
reflecting 4,000 plan participants on the first
day of the plan year and 4,200 plan
participants on the last day of the plan year.
For purposes of calculating the fee under
section 4376 using the Form 5500 method,
Employer C must treat the number of covered
lives for the plan year ending July 31, 2013
as equal to the sum of 4,000 and 4,200 or
8,200, divided by 2, or 4,100. To calculate the
section 4376 fee under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section for the plan year ending July 31,
2013, Employer C must determine the
applicable dollar amount under paragraph
(c)(3) of this section and multiply that
amount by the average number of lives
covered under the plan.
Example 2. Same facts as Example 1,
except that the Employer C Self-Insured
Health plan offers self-only coverage and
family coverage. For purposes of calculating
the fee under section 4376 using the Form
5500 method, Employer C must treat the
number of covered lives for the plan year
ending July 31, 2013 as equal to the sum of
4,000 and 4,200, or 8,200. To calculate the
section 4376 fee under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section for the plan year ending July 31,
2013, Employer C must determine the
applicable dollar amount under paragraph
(c)(3) of this section and multiply that
amount by the average number of lives
covered under the plan.
(vi) Special rule for health FSAs and
HRAs. For purposes of this section, if a
plan sponsor does not maintain an
applicable self-insured health plan other
than a health flexible spending
arrangement (health FSA) (as described
in section 106(c)(2)) or a health
reimbursement arrangement (as
described in Notice 2002–45 (2002–2 CB
93)) (HRA), the plan sponsor may treat
each participant’s health FSA or HRA as
covering a single covered life (and
therefore the plan sponsor is not
required to include as covered lives any
spouse, dependent, or other beneficiary
of the individual participant in the
health FSA or HRA, as applicable). If a
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health FSA or HRA that is an applicable
self-insured health plan has the same
plan sponsor as another applicable selfinsured health plan other than a health
FSA or HRA, the two arrangements may
be treated as a single plan under
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section.
However, the special counting rule in
this paragraph applies only for purposes
of the health FSA or HRA and,
therefore, applies only for purposes of
the participants in the health FSA or
HRA that do not participate in the other
applicable self-insured health plan. (The
participants in the health FSA or HRA
that participate in the other applicable
self-insured health plan will be counted
in accordance with the method applied
for counting lives under that other plan
as described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section.) See § 601.601(d)(2) of this
chapter.
(vii) Special rule for the first year the
fee is in effect. Notwithstanding
paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section, for
plan years beginning before July 11,
2012 and ending on or after October 1,
2012, a plan sponsor may determine the
average number of lives covered under
the plan for the plan year using any
reasonable method.
(3) Applicable dollar amount. For
plan years ending on or after October 1,
2012, and before October 1, 2013, the
applicable dollar amount is $1. For plan
years ending on or after October 1, 2013,
and before October 1, 2014, the
applicable dollar amount is $2. For any
plan year ending in any fiscal year
beginning on or after October 1, 2014,
the applicable dollar amount is equal to
the sum of—
(i) The applicable dollar amount for
plan years ending in the previous fiscal
year; plus
(ii) The amount equal to the product
of—
(A) The applicable dollar amount for
plan years ending in the previous fiscal
year; and
(B) The percentage increase in the
projected per capita amount of the
National Health Expenditures most
recently released by the Department of
Health and Human Services before the
beginning of the fiscal year.
(d) Effective/applicability date. This
section is effective on April 17, 2012.
This section applies for plan years that
end on or after October 1, 2012, and
before October 1, 2019.
§ 46.4377–1
Definitions and special rules.
(a) Definitions. The following
definitions apply for purposes of
sections 4375 and 4376 and §§ 46.4375–
1 and 46.4376–1.
(1) Accident and health coverage. The
term accident and health coverage
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22705
means any coverage that, if provided by
an insurance policy, would cause such
policy to be a specified health policy (as
defined in section 4375(c)).
(2) Individual residing in the United
States—(i) The term individual residing
in the United States means an
individual with a place of abode in the
United States.
(ii) Determination of place of abode.
For purposes of paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, an issuer or a plan sponsor may
rely on the most recent address on file
with the issuer or plan sponsor and may
treat the primary insured and the
primary insured’s spouse, dependents,
or other beneficiaries covered by the
policy, as having the same place of
abode. For this purpose, the primary
insured is the individual covered by the
policy other than due to that
individual’s status as the spouse,
dependent, or other beneficiary of
another covered individual.
(3) United States. The term United
States includes American Samoa, Guam,
the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto
Rico, the Virgin Islands, and any other
possession of the United States.
(4) Fiscal year. The term fiscal year
means the year beginning on October 1
and ending on the following September
30.
(b) Treatment of exempt governmental
programs—(1) In general. The fees
imposed by sections 4375 and 4376 do
not apply to any covered life under an
exempt governmental program as
defined in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section.
(2) Exempt governmental program.
For purposes of this section, exempt
governmental program means any—
(i) Insurance program established
under title XVIII of the Social Security
Act;
(ii) Medical assistance program
established by title XIX or XXI of the
Social Security Act;
(iii) Program established by Federal
law for providing medical care (other
than through insurance policies) to
individuals (or their spouses and
dependents) by reason of such
individuals being (or having been)
members of the Armed Forces of the
United States; and
(iv) Program established by Federal
law for providing medical care (other
than through insurance policies) to
members of Indian tribes (as defined in
section 4(d) of the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act).
(c) Effective/applicability date. This
section is effective on April 17, 2012.
This section applies to all policies and
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‘‘Public Participation and Request for
Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below for instructions on submitting
comments.
plans to which section 4375 or 4376
applies.
Steven T. Miller,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
If
you have questions on this notice, call
or email LCDR Aaron Lubrano, Coast
Guard Sector San Francisco, U.S. Coast
Guard; telephone (415) 399–3446, email
Aaron.C.Lubrano@uscg.mil. If you have
questions on viewing or submitting
material to the docket, call Renee V.
Wright, Program Manager, Docket
Operations, telephone (202) 366–9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
[FR Doc. 2012–9173 Filed 4–12–12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Parts 100 and 165
[Docket No. USCG–2011–0551]
Special Local Regulation and Safety
Zone; America’s Cup Sailing Events,
San Francisco, CA
Coast Guard, DHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of
availability and request for comments.
AGENCY:
The Coast Guard announces
the availability of a draft environmental
assessment of the temporary special
local regulation and temporary safety
zone proposed for those portions of the
‘‘America’s Cup World Series,’’ the
‘‘Louis Vuitton Cup’’ challenger
selection series, and the ‘‘America’s Cup
Finals Match’’ sailing regattas that may
be conducted in the waters of San
Francisco Bay adjacent to the City of
San Francisco waterfront in the vicinity
of the Golden Gate Bridge and Alcatraz
Island between August and September
2012 and between July and September
2013. We request your comments on
this draft environmental assessment.
DATES: Comments and related material
must be submitted to our online docket
via https://www.regulations.gov on or
before April 30, 2012, or reach the
Docket Management Facility by that
date.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by docket number USCG–
2011–0551 using any one of the
following methods:
(1) Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov.
(2) Fax: 202–493–2251.
(3) Mail: Docket Management Facility
(M–30), U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590–
0001.
(4) Hand delivery: Same as mail
address above, between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays. The telephone number
is 202–366–9329.
To avoid duplication, please use only
one of these four methods. See the
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
14:21 Apr 16, 2012
Jkt 226001
Public Participation and Request for
Comments
We encourage you to submit
comments and related material on the
draft environmental assessment. All
comments received will be posted,
without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov and will include
any personal information you have
provided.
Submitting comments: If you submit a
comment, please include the docket
number for this notice (USCG–2011–
0551) and provide a reason for each
suggestion or recommendation. You
may submit your comments and
material online, or by fax, mail or hand
delivery, but please use only one of
these means. We recommend that you
include your name and a mailing
address, an email address, or a
telephone number in the body of your
document so that we can contact you if
we have questions regarding your
submission.
To submit your comment online, go to
https://www.regulations.gov, type
‘‘USCG–2011–0551’’ and click
‘‘Search.’’ Then click ‘‘Submit a
Comment’’ in the ‘‘Actions’’ column. If
you submit your comments by mail or
hand delivery, submit them in an
unbound format, no larger than 81⁄2 by
11 inches, suitable for copying and
electronic filing. If you submit them by
mail and would like to know that they
reached the Facility, please enclose a
stamped, self-addressed postcard or
envelope. We will consider all
comments and material received during
the comment period.
Viewing the comments and draft
environmental assessment: To view the
comments and draft environmental
assessment, go to https://
www.regulations.gov, type ‘‘USCG–
2011–0551’’ and click ‘‘Search.’’ Then
click the ‘‘Open Docket Folder’’ in the
‘‘Actions’’ column. If you do not have
access to the Internet, you may view the
docket online by visiting the Docket
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Management Facility in Room W12–140
on the ground floor of the Department
of Transportation West Building, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays. We have an agreement with
the Department of Transportation to use
the Docket Management Facility.
Privacy Act: Anyone can search the
electronic form of comments received
into any of our dockets by the name of
the individual submitting the comment
(or signing the comment, if submitted
on behalf of an association, business,
labor union, etc.). You may review a
Privacy Act, system of records notice
regarding our public dockets in the
January 17, 2008, issue of the Federal
Register (73 FR 3316).
Background and Purpose
The America’s Cup Race Management
has applied for a Marine Event Permit
to hold the 34th America’s Cup races on
the waters of San Francisco Bay in
California. The Coast Guard has not
approved the Marine Event Permit and
is still evaluating the application,
including the potential environmental
impact of the requested permit. If the
permit is approved, however, we
anticipate that a special local regulation
may be necessary to ensure public safety
during the races. To provide adequate
time for public input, we proposed a
special local regulation and safety zone
on January 30, 2012 (77 FR 4501).
In the January 2012 notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Coast Guard
proposed regulations for the 2012 and
2013 races. These include proposed
regulated areas surrounding the primary
and contingent race areas; a designated
area for recreational swimmers, rowers,
and kayakers; a transit zone for using
during the 2013 races; restrictions on
vessel traffic and the use of Anchorage
No. 7; and a safety zone around racing
vessels. These proposed rules are
temporary and would be enforced only
on race days. The public comment
period on these proposed rules remains
open through April 30, 2012. If the
Marine Event Permit is not approved,
we will withdraw the proposed rules.
Draft Environmental Assessment
In accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321–4370f),
Department of Homeland Security
Management Directive 023–01, and
Commandant Instruction M16475.lD,
we have prepared a draft environmental
assessment (EA) of the proposed special
local regulation and safety zone
described above. The draft EA, which is
available in the docket, identifies and
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 74 (Tuesday, April 17, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 22691-22706]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-9173]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 40 and 46
[REG-136008-11]
RIN 1545-BK59
Fees on Health Insurance Policies and Self-Insured Plans for the
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations that implement and
provide guidance on the fees imposed by the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act on issuers of certain health insurance policies and
plan sponsors of certain self-insured health plans to fund the Patient-
Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund. These proposed regulations
affect the issuers and plan sponsors that are directed to pay those
fees. This document also contains a request for comments and provides
notice of public hearing on these proposed regulations.
DATES: Written or electronic comments must be received by July 16,
2012. Requests to speak and outlines of topics to be discussed at the
public hearing scheduled for Wednesday, August 8, 2012, at 10 a.m.,
must be received by July 30, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-136008-11), Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044. Submissions may be hand-delivered Monday through Friday between
the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-136008-11),
Courier's Desk Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC, or sent electronically via the IRS Internet site via
the Federal eRulemaking Portal at www.regulations.gov (IRS REG-136008-
11). The public hearing will be held in the IRS Auditorium at the
Internal Revenue Building, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations,
Rebecca L. Baxter at (202) 622-3970 (regarding health insurance
policies) or R. Lisa Mojiri-Azad at (202) 622-6080 (regarding self-
insured health arrangements); concerning the submission of comments or
the public hearing, Oluwafunmilayo (Funmi)
[[Page 22692]]
Taylor at (202) 622-7180 (not toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information contained in this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget in
accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)). Comments on the collection of information should be sent to
the Office of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for the
Department of the Treasury, Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, with copies to the Internal Revenue
Service, Attn: IRS Reports Clearance Officer, SE:W:CAR:MP:T:T:SP,
Washington, DC 20224. Comments on the collection of information should
be received by July 16, 2012. Comments are specifically requested
concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of the IRS, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
How the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected may be enhanced;
How the burden of complying with the proposed collection of
information may be minimized, including through the application of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology; and
Estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
The collections of information in these proposed regulations are in
Sec. 46.4375-1(c)(2)(v) (use of National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC) Supplemental Health Care Exhibit to calculate the
fee under section 4375); Sec. 46.4375-1(c)(2)(vi) (use of certain
state forms to calculate the fee under section 4375); Sec. 46.4376-
1(b)(2)(G) (identification or designation of a plan sponsor under the
governing plan document for certain applicable self-insured health
plans); and Sec. 46.4376-1(c)(2)(v) (use of the Form 5500, ``Annual
Return/Report of Employee Benefit Plan,'' to calculate the fee under
section 4376).
The collections of information under Sec. 46.4375-1(c)(2)(v),
Sec. 46.4375-1(c)(2)(vi), and Sec. 46.4376-1(c)(2)(v) are intended to
lower the burden on issuers and plan sponsors of calculating the
average number of lives covered for the applicable policy year or plan
year. The burden for the collection of information contained in these
provisions will be reflected in the burden on the Form 720 ``Quarterly
Federal Excise Tax Return'' after it is revised to include the
reporting and payment of the fee imposed by sections 4375 and 4376.
The collection of information contained in Sec. 46.4376-1(b)(2)(G)
is necessary to provide certain entities that establish or maintain an
applicable self-insured health plan the flexibility to designate the
person that will be responsible for reporting and paying the fee
imposed by section 4376. The likely respondents are employers, employee
organizations, or persons that establish or maintain an applicable
self-insured health plan and are entitled to make an election under
Sec. 46.4376-1(b)(2)(G).
Estimated number of respondents is 10,000.
Estimated average annual burden per respondent is 5 minutes.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a valid
control number assigned by the Office of Management and Budget.
Books or records relating to a collection of information must be
retained as long as their contents may become material in the
administration of any internal revenue law. Generally, tax returns and
tax return information are confidential, as required by 26 U.S.C. 6103.
Background
This document contains proposed amendments to 26 CFR part 40
(Excise Tax Procedural Regulations) and 26 CFR part 46 (relating to
excise taxes imposed on policies issued by foreign insurers and
obligations not in registered form) to implement the requirements under
sections 4375 through 4377 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code).
Sections 4375 and 4376 of the Code impose fees on issuers of specified
health insurance policies and plan sponsors of applicable self-insured
health plans, and section 4377 contains special rules that apply to
these issuers and plan sponsors with respect to these fees. Sections
4375, 4376, and 4377 were added to the Code by section 6301 of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Affordable Care Act),
Public Law 111-148 (124 Stat. 119 (2010)).
The Affordable Care Act includes provisions that promote research
to evaluate and compare health outcomes and the clinical effectiveness,
risks, and benefits of medical treatments, services, procedures, drugs,
and other strategies or items that treat, manage, diagnose, or prevent
illness or injury. One such provision relates to the establishment of
the private, nonprofit corporation, the Patient-Centered Outcomes
Research Institute (the ``Institute''). The Institute will assist,
through research, patients, clinicians, purchasers, and policy-makers
in making informed health decisions by advancing the quality and
relevance of evidence-based medicine through the synthesis and
dissemination of comparative clinical effectiveness research findings.
The statute specifically prohibits the Secretary of Health and Human
Services (HHS) from using the evidence or findings of the research
conducted in determining coverage, reimbursement, or incentive programs
unless it is through an iterative and transparent process which
includes public comment and considers the effect on subpopulations.
Nothing under this provision allows the Secretary of HHS to deny
coverage of items or services solely on the basis of comparative
clinical effectiveness research. The statute provides that the
Institute will not develop a dollars-per-quality-life-year estimate as
a threshold to establish effective or recommended care. Section 6301 of
the Affordable Care Act amended the Code by adding new section 9511 to
establish the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (the
``Trust Fund''), which is the funding source for the Institute. Section
6301 of the Affordable Care Act also added new Code sections 4375,
4376, and 4377 to provide a funding source for the Trust Fund that is
to be financed, in part, by fees to be paid by issuers of specified
health insurance policies and sponsors of applicable self-insured
health plans.
Statutory Provisions
Section 4375(a) imposes a fee on an issuer of a specified health
insurance policy for each policy year ending on or after October 1,
2012, and before October 1, 2019. Under section 4375(a), the fee is two
dollars (one dollar in the case of policy years ending before October
1, 2013) multiplied by the average number of lives covered under the
policy. Under section 4375(d), for policy years ending on or after
October 1, 2014, the fee is increased based on increases in the
projected per capita amount of National Health Expenditures. Section
4375(b) provides that the fee imposed by section 4375(a) shall be paid
by the issuer of the policy.
Section 4375(c) defines specified health insurance policy as any
accident or health insurance policy (including a policy under a group
health plan) issued with respect to individuals residing in the United
States. Section 4375(c)(2) excludes from a specified health insurance
policy any insurance if
[[Page 22693]]
substantially all of its coverage is of excepted benefits described in
section 9832(c). Section 4375(c)(3) provides that a specified health
insurance policy includes any prepaid health coverage arrangement
described in section 4375(c)(3)(B). An arrangement is described in
section 4375(c)(3)(B) if, under the arrangement, fixed payments or
premiums are received as consideration for a person's agreement to
provide or arrange for the provision of accident or health coverage to
residents of the United States, regardless of how the coverage is
provided or arranged to be provided.
Section 4376 imposes a fee on a plan sponsor of an applicable self-
insured health plan for each plan year ending on or after October 1,
2012, and before October 1, 2019. Under section 4376(a), the fee is two
dollars (one dollar for plan years ending before October 1, 2013)
multiplied by the average number of lives covered under the plan for
the plan year. Under section 4376(d), for plan years ending on or after
October 1, 2014, the fee is increased based on increases in the
projected per capita amount of National Health Expenditures. Section
4376(b)(1) provides that the fee imposed by section 4376(a) shall be
paid by the plan sponsor.
Section 4376(b)(2) defines plan sponsor as the employer in the case
of a plan established or maintained by a single employer, or the
employee organization in the case of a plan established or maintained
by an employee organization. Section 4376(b)(2) also provides that, in
the case of (1) a plan established or maintained by two or more
employers or jointly by one or more employers and one or more employee
organizations, (2) a multiple employer welfare arrangement, or (3) a
voluntary employees' beneficiary association described in section
501(c)(9), the plan sponsor is the association, committee, joint board
of trustees, or other similar group of representatives of the parties
who establish or maintain the plan. Section 4376(b)(2) further provides
that in the case of a plan established or maintained by a rural
electric cooperative (as defined in section 3(40)(B)(iv) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA)) or rural
telephone cooperative association (as defined in section 3(40)(B)(v) of
ERISA), the plan sponsor is the cooperative or association that
established or maintained the plan.
Section 4376(c) defines applicable self-insured health plan as any
plan for providing accident or health coverage if any portion of the
coverage is provided other than through an insurance policy, and the
plan is established or maintained: (1) By one or more employers for the
benefit of their employees or former employees, (2) by one or more
employee organizations for the benefit of their members or former
members, (3) jointly by one or more employers and one or more employee
organizations for the benefit of employees or former employees, (4) by
a voluntary employees' beneficiary association described in section
501(c)(9), (5) by any organization described in section 501(c)(6), or
(6) if not previously described, by a multiple employer welfare
arrangement (as defined in section 3(40) of ERISA), a rural electric
cooperative (as defined in section 3(40)(B)(iv) of ERISA), or a rural
telephone cooperative association (as defined in section 3(40)(B)(v) of
ERISA).
Section 4377 includes definitions and special rules that apply for
purposes of sections 4375 and 4376. Section 4377(a)(1) defines accident
and health coverage as any coverage that, if provided by an insurance
policy, would cause the policy to be a specified health insurance
policy (as defined in section 4375(c)).
Section 4377(b)(1)(B) provides that ``[n]otwithstanding any other
law or rule of law, governmental entities shall not be exempt from''
the fee imposed by sections 4375 and 4376 unless the policy or plan is
an exempt governmental program. Section 4377(b)(3) defines exempt
governmental program as (1) any insurance program established under
title XVIII of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.)
(Medicare), (2) the medical assistance program established by title XIX
(42 U.S.C. 1396 et seq.) (Medicaid) or title XXI of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1397aa et seq.) (Children's Health Insurance Program),
(3) any program established by Federal law for providing medical care
(other than through insurance policies) to individuals (or the spouses
and dependents thereof) by reason of such individuals being members of
the Armed Forces of the United States or veterans, and (4) any program
established by Federal law for providing medical care (other than
through insurance policies) to members of Indian tribes (as defined in
section 4(d) of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, 25 U.S.C.
1603). Under these special rules, a governmental entity (including a
federally recognized Indian tribal government) that is the plan sponsor
of an applicable self-insured health plan that does not meet the
definition of an exempt governmental program must pay the fee imposed
by section 4376.
Section 4377(c) provides that the fees imposed by sections 4375 and
4376 are treated as taxes for purposes of subtitle F of the Code.
Notice 2011-35
On June 8, 2011, the IRS released Notice 2011-35 (2011-25 IRB 879),
which requested comments on how the fees imposed under sections 4375
and 4376 should be calculated and paid, including possible rules and
safe harbors. The Treasury Department and the IRS received numerous
comments in response to Notice 2011-35 and have considered all comments
in drafting these proposed regulations. The relevant portions of Notice
2011-35 and comments are discussed in more detail in this preamble. See
Sec. 601.601(d)(2).
Explanation of Provisions
Specified Health Insurance Policies Subject to the Fee Under Section
4375
The fee under section 4375 is imposed on the issuer of a specified
health insurance policy. Under the proposed regulations, the fee must
be calculated using the applicable dollar amount in effect for the
policy year (for example, $1 for policy years ending on or after
October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2013) and one of the permitted
methods for determining the average number of lives covered under the
policy during the policy year.
The term specified health insurance policy includes only accident
and health insurance policies that are issued with respect to an
individual residing in the United States. The proposed regulations
clarify that for purposes of this fee, ``an individual residing in the
United States'' means an individual who has a place of abode in the
United States. The United States, for this purpose, includes American
Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, the Virgin
Islands, and any other possession of the United States.
Commentators requested a bright-line rule for determining whether
an individual covered by a policy is residing in the United States.
Many commentators suggested that issuers should be able to rely on the
address on file for the primary insured to determine whether
individuals covered by the policy are residing in the United States.
The Treasury Department and the IRS recognize that the address on file
for the primary insured may be the only information the insurer has
with respect to the residence of the individuals covered under the
policy, and also that the address on file is likely the place of abode
for most, if not all, of the covered individuals. Accordingly, the
proposed
[[Page 22694]]
regulations provide that if the address on file with the issuer or plan
sponsor for the primary insured is outside of the United States, the
issuer or plan sponsor may treat the primary insured and the primary
insured's spouse, dependents, or other beneficiaries covered under the
policy as having the same place of abode and not residing in the United
States. For this purpose, the term ``primary insured'' refers to the
individual eligible for coverage other than due to his or her status as
a spouse, dependent, or other beneficiary of another insured individual
(for example, in the case of a group health plan for employees, the
individual eligible for coverage due to his or her status as an
employee).
Several commentators also suggested that expatriate policies not be
considered specified health insurance policies for purposes of the fee
because the policies are issued principally to cover employees who do
not reside in the United States. Commentators argued that expatriate
policies are predominantly group health insurance policies sold to
employers for a unique subset of their employees, the substantial
majority of whom are living outside the United States while working for
the employer. According to these commentators, only a small minority of
the individuals covered under these expatriate policies may be foreign
nationals working for the employer in the United States. For these
reasons, the proposed regulations provide that the term ``specified
health insurance policy'' does not include any group policy issued to
an employer if the facts and circumstances show that the group policy
was designed and issued specifically to cover primarily employees who
are working and residing outside of the United States.
Commentators requested that the regulations provide that stop loss
and indemnity reinsurance policies not be considered specified health
insurance policies. Commentators argued that stop loss and indemnity
reinsurance policies are not providing coverage for lives covered;
rather, these types of policies are intended to limit the original
obligor's financial exposure. Section 4375 imposes a fee based on the
average number of lives covered. Because stop loss and indemnity
reinsurance policies generally do not provide coverage based upon the
number of lives covered, the proposed regulations provide that for
purposes of section 4375, these policies are not specified health
insurance policies subject to the fee under section 4375. No inference
is intended as to whether stop loss or indemnity reinsurance policies
may constitute health insurance policies for other purposes.
Commentators raised questions about the description of prepaid
health coverage arrangements in section 4375(c)(3)(B) and requested
that the regulations clarify which types of arrangements are covered by
that section. One commentator suggested that the language in section
4375(c)(3)(B) is intended to describe health maintenance organizations
and similar arrangements, noting that the definition of ``health
insurance,'' which was added to ERISA, the Public Health Service Act,
and the Code by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
of 1996, Public Law 104-191 (110 Stat. 1936 (1996)), was specifically
drafted to include health maintenance organizations and similar
arrangements. The Treasury Department and the IRS agree that the
language in section 4375(c)(3)(B) describes health maintenance
organizations and similar organizations; therefore, the proposed
regulations clarify that the description in section 4375(c)(3)(B)
covers any hospital or medical service policy or certificate, hospital
or medical service plan contract, or health maintenance organization
contract.
Self-insured Health Plans and Plan Sponsors Subject to the Fee Under
Section 4376
The fee under section 4376 is imposed on the plan sponsor of an
applicable self-insured health plan. Under the statute and these
proposed regulations, the fee must be calculated using the applicable
dollar amount in effect for the plan year (for example, $1 for plan
years ending on or after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2013)
and one of the permitted methods for determining the average number of
lives covered under the plan during the plan year.
These proposed regulations provide that an applicable self-insured
health plan is a plan that is established or maintained by a plan
sponsor for the benefit of employees, former employees, members, former
members, or other eligible individuals to provide accident and health
coverage (within the meaning of Sec. 46.4377-1(a)(1) of these proposed
regulations), any portion of which is provided other than through an
insurance policy and that meets certain other conditions. The proposed
regulations provide that an applicable self-insured health plan does
not include an exempt governmental program (as defined in section
4377(c)(3)) but does include a plan that is established or maintained
solely for the benefit of former employees (commonly referred to as a
retiree-only plan).\1\ A self-insured health plan that does not provide
coverage described in section 4376(c) is not an applicable self-insured
health plan. For example, a self-insured group health plan of a
Federally recognized Indian tribal government that provides coverage
only to tribal members that are not employees of the Indian tribal
government would not be an applicable self-insured health plan, unless
it otherwise falls within one of the statutory definitions of an
applicable self-insured health plan (for example, the plan is
established or maintained by a section 501(c)(6) organization).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Sections 4375 and 4376 may apply to a retiree-only plan
because, although section 9832 excludes group health plans that have
less than two participants who are current employees (such as
retiree-only plans) from the requirements of chapter 100 (which
includes a number of requirements added by the Affordable Care Act),
this exclusion does not apply to sections 4375 and 4376 because
these sections are in chapter 34. In addition, section 4376(c)(2)(A)
indicates explicitly that an applicable self-insured health plan
includes a plan established or maintained by one or more employers
for the benefit of their employees or former employees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notice 2011-35 (2011-25 IRB 879) invited comments on the type or
types of health flexible spending arrangements (as described in section
106(c)(2)) (health FSAs) and health reimbursement arrangements (as
described in Notice 2002-45 (2002-2 CB 93)) (HRAs) that would be
excluded from the definition of an applicable self-insured health plan
because they provide the kind of coverage that, if provided by an
insurance policy, would not cause the policy to be treated as a
specified health insurance policy, as defined in section 4375(c).
Health FSAs and HRAs are both self-insured health plans.\2\ See Sec.
601.601(d)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Archer Medical Savings Accounts (Archer MSAs) under section
220(d) and Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) under section 223(d) are
tax-favored trusts for the purpose of paying the qualified medical
expenses of the account beneficiary. Archer MSAs and HSAs are
generally neither health insurance policies nor self-insured health
plans and thus are not subject to the taxes under sections 4375 and
4376.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commentators generally requested that all health FSAs and HRAs be
excluded from the definition of applicable self-insured health plan
under section 4376. Commentators also suggested that because the
majority of health FSAs or HRAs are provided in connection with a major
medical plan, they should be excluded from the fee imposed by section
4376 to avoid the fee from being imposed twice with respect to the same
individual. Some of the commentators also observed that there would be
challenges arising from the possibility that an employer may lack
information on the number of dependents whose medical expenses are
[[Page 22695]]
eligible for reimbursement from an employee's health FSA or HRA.
Some commentators requested that if HRAs were not excluded from the
definition of applicable self-insured health plan, the guidance limit
the fee under section 4376 to HRAs that are not offered in connection
with a major medical plan or permit treatment of an HRA that is offered
in connection with a major medical plan as a single applicable self-
insured health plan to avoid the fee applying twice with respect to
individuals covered by a major medical plan and a related HRA.
The proposed regulations do not exclude all health FSAs and HRAs
from the definition of an applicable self-insured health plan under
section 4376. In response to comments, however, these proposed
regulations provide that multiple self-insured arrangements established
and maintained by the same plan sponsor and with the same plan year are
subject to a single fee. Accordingly, an HRA is not subject to a
separate fee under section 4376 if the HRA is integrated with another
applicable self-insured health plan that provides major medical
coverage, provided that the HRA and the other plan are established or
maintained by the same plan sponsor. However, section 4375 imposes a
separate fee on the issuer of a specified health insurance policy.
Consistent with the statutory structure which separates the fee with
respect to health insurance policies from the fee with respect to self-
insured plans, the proposed regulations provide that an HRA that is
integrated with an insured group health plan is treated as an
``applicable self-insured health plan'' the plan sponsor of which is
subject to the fee under section 4376, while the issuer of the group
insurance policy for the insured group health plan is subject to the
fee under section 4375, even though the HRA and the insured group
health plan are maintained by the same plan sponsor.
These proposed regulations reflect the special rule in section
4375(c)(2), which is carried over to self-insured arrangements through
the definition of ``accident and health coverage'' in section
4377(a)(1), that a specified health insurance policy does not include
any insurance if substantially all of its coverage is of excepted
benefits described in section 9832(c). The proposed regulations provide
that a health FSA that satisfies the requirements of an excepted
benefit under section 9832(c) is excluded from the definition of an
``applicable self-insured health plan'' and therefore is not subject to
the fee imposed by section 4376. (See Sec. 54.9831-1(c)(3)(v),
relating to additional rules on health FSAs that are excepted
benefits.) A health FSA that does not satisfy the requirements to be
treated as an excepted benefit is an applicable self-insured health
plan subject to the fee imposed by section 4376 (and, for purposes of
the rules in the preceding paragraph, is treated the same as an
integrated HRA).
In addition, to address the concerns raised about the availability
of information on the lives covered under an HRA or health FSA, the
proposed regulations contain a special rule permitting the plan sponsor
to assume one covered life for each employee with an HRA and for each
employee with a health FSA that is not an excepted benefit.
Commentators also requested that an employee assistance program
(EAP) or wellness arrangement be exempt from the fee. Commentators
argued that generally, under an EAP or wellness arrangement, benefits
for medical care are secondary or incidental to non-medical benefits.
In response, these proposed regulations exclude from the definition of
applicable self-insured health plan an EAP, disease management program,
or wellness program, if the program does not provide significant
benefits in the nature of medical care or treatment.
For each type of applicable self-insured health plan identified in
section 4376(c), the plan sponsor is the person responsible for the
payment of the fee. Section 4376(b)(2) provides that in the case of a
plan established or maintained by a single employer, the plan sponsor
is the employer, and in the case of a plan established or maintained by
a single employee organization, the plan sponsor is the employee
organization. Section 4376 does not contain rules that would treat
related entities as a single entity. Accordingly, for example, under
these proposed regulations, a plan that is maintained by multiple
related employers is not a plan that is established or maintained by a
single employer, but, for section 4376 purposes, is considered a plan
that is established or maintained by two or more employers.
In the case of a plan maintained by two or more employers, the
proposed regulations provide that the plan sponsor is the person
identified as the plan sponsor by the terms of the document under which
the plan is operated, or the employer designated as the plan sponsor
for purposes of section 4376 by the terms of the document under which
the plan is operated (provided that such designation is made, and that
employer has consented to the designation, by no later than the due
date of the return under section 4376 for that plan year is required to
be filed, after which date such designation for that plan year may not
be changed or revoked, and provided further that an employer may be
designated as the plan sponsor only if that employer is one of the
employers maintaining the plan). In the absence of the identification
or designation of a plan sponsor by the terms of the document under
which the plan is operated, the proposed regulations provide that the
plan sponsor is each employer that maintains the plan (with respect to
employees of that employer). Because the plan sponsor may be designated
on or before the due date for filing the Form 720, ``Quarterly Federal
Excise Tax Return,'' for the plan year, and under these proposed
regulations the first potential due date for filing the Form 720 is
July 31, 2013, this rule provides related employers that provide
coverage for their employees under a single plan ample time to
designate a plan sponsor if the employers wish to consolidate the
filing and the payment of the fee under section 4376. In the absence of
designation of a plan sponsor in the governing plan document, the
proposed regulations provide that the plan sponsor is each employer
that maintains the plan (with respect to employees of that employer),
and therefore each employer would be required to file its own Form 720,
reflecting the section 4376 fee applicable to that employer as a plan
sponsor with respect to its employees.
As discussed in Notice 2011-35 and earlier in the section of this
preamble entitled ``Statutory Provisions,'' section 4377(b) provides
that the fee imposed by section 4376 applies to a governmental entity
that establishes or maintains an applicable self-insured health plan
(other than a plan that qualifies as an exempt governmental program)
for its employees. These proposed regulations provide that a
governmental entity that establishes or maintains an applicable self-
insured health plan for its current or former employees is the plan
sponsor for purposes of the fee imposed by section 4376. Thus, these
proposed regulations require that a governmental entity (including a
Federally recognized Indian tribal government) that establishes or
maintains an applicable self-insured health plan (other than a plan
that qualifies as an exempt governmental program) must calculate,
report, and pay the fee under section 4376 in accordance with the
guidance in these proposed regulations.
Several commentators requested that the guidance clarify that, in
the case of
[[Page 22696]]
an applicable self-insured health plan that is established or
maintained by a board of trustees, plan assets (for example, amounts
held in a trust) or the employer contributions to the plan could be
used to pay the fee under section 4376. Because the use of plan assets
to pay the fee under section 4376 may have implications under various
state and Federal laws (including, for example, ERISA's fiduciary
provisions), the question of what the permissible sources of funds are
for paying the fee under section 4376 is an issue that is outside the
scope of these proposed regulations. The Treasury Department and the
IRS have consulted the Department of Labor concerning comments on the
appropriate sources to pay the fee under section 4376. The Department
of Labor has advised the Treasury Department and the IRS that it is
considering permissible funding sources for these fee payments by plan
sponsors that are subject to ERISA's fiduciary provisions.
Calculation of the Fee Under Section 4375
The fee imposed on an issuer of a specified health insurance policy
under section 4375 is based on the average number of lives covered
under the policy. Notice 2011-35 invited comments on reasonable methods
an issuer may use to determine the average number of lives covered
under a policy. Notice 2011-35 also invited comments on whether
guidance should provide a safe harbor for issuers that are required to
file the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)
Supplemental Health Care Exhibit (Exhibit). In particular, the Treasury
Department and the IRS outlined a potential safe harbor based on the
number of lives reported on the most recently filed Exhibit or based on
the average of the covered lives reported on the most recently filed
Exhibit and the immediately preceding Exhibit.
Commentators generally favored a safe harbor that allows issuers to
calculate the average number of lives covered under the policy based on
data reported on the Exhibit but expressed concerns with exclusive
reliance upon covered lives data on the Exhibit. According to the
instructions to the Exhibit, the term ``covered lives'' means the total
number of lives insured, including dependents, at any time during the
reporting period, which means the Exhibit captures all lives covered
without regard to how long the coverage lasted. Several commentators
recommended that the regulations allow issuers to use member months
data reported in the Exhibit. The Exhibit defines the term ``member
months,'' as the sum of the number of lives covered on a single day in
every month. Commentators argued that dividing the member months data
by 12 (the number of months in a reporting period) is a more accurate
measure of the average number of lives covered because it better
reflects that some individuals may only be insured for part of the
year.
Commentators noted that some entities are not required to file the
Exhibit, but must provide comparable forms to their applicable state
regulators. Commentators recommended that the proposed regulations
permit issuers to use information included in any other report filed
with a state government.
Some commentators suggested that the regulations allow issuers to
determine the average number of lives covered by counting the actual
number of lives covered during the policy year. Other commentators
requested that the regulations allow the use of any reasonable formula
or other method to determine the average number of lives covered,
including a formula or method that historically has been used by the
issuer for other business purposes.
The proposed regulations provide issuers the choice of using any of
four alternative methods to determine the average number of lives
covered under policies that it issues for purposes of the fee imposed
by section 4375. First, an issuer may determine the average number of
lives covered under a policy for a policy year by calculating the sum
of lives covered for each day of the policy year and dividing that sum
by the number of days in the policy year (the actual count method).
Second, an issuer may determine the average number of lives covered
under a policy for a policy year by adding the total number of lives
covered on one date in each quarter of the policy year, or an equal
number of dates for each quarter, and dividing the total by the number
of dates on which a count was made (the snapshot method). Third, as an
alternative to determining the average number of lives covered under
each individual policy for its respective policy year, an issuer may
determine the average number of lives covered under all policies in
effect for a calendar year based on the ``member months'' reported on
the Exhibit divided by 12 (the member months method). Fourth, an issuer
that is not required to file the Exhibit may determine the average
number of lives covered under all of its policies in effect for a
calendar year using data in any form that is equivalent to the Exhibit
that is filed with the state of domicile if the state form reports
lives covered in the same manner as member months is reported on the
Exhibit (the state form method). For this purpose, an equivalent form
includes only a form that reports all the lives covered under the
policy (including, for example, spouses, dependents, and other
beneficiaries, as applicable).
The proposed regulations direct an issuer to apply a single method
in determining the average number of lives covered under the policy for
the year. In addition, issuers must use the same method of counting
lives for all policies reported on a single return. Issuers using the
actual count or snapshot method may change to the snapshot or actual
count method from one policy year to the next. For example, an issuer
with a policy that has a policy year that ends on June 30, Policy A,
may determine lives covered under Policy A for July 1, 2013 to June 30,
2014, using the actual count method if the issuer uses the actual count
method for all policies for which a liability will be reported on the
Form 720, ``Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,'' due by July 31, 2015
(the due date for the return that will include the July 2013 to June
2014 policy year for Policy A, as discussed in the section of this
preamble entitled ``Application of Excise Tax Procedural Rules (Filing
of Returns and Payment of Fees'')). The issuer may change its method
for determining lives covered under Policy A to the snapshot method for
the July 1, 2014, to June 30, 2015 policy year, provided that the
snapshot method is used for all policies for which a liability will be
reported on the return due by July 31, 2016 (the due date for the
return that will include the July 2014 to June 2015 policy year for
Policy A).
While the actual count and snapshot methods count lives covered on
a policy-by-policy basis for each policy having a policy year that ends
in the reporting period (which is based on the calendar year), the
member months and state form methods count all lives covered during the
calendar year for all policies in effect during the calendar year
irrespective of when actual policy years end. For example, for a policy
with a policy year that ends on June 30, member months will include
lives covered under that policy from January 1 to December 31 and
aggregate those lives covered with all other lives covered for the
calendar year under all policies in effect during the calendar year. To
convert the lives covered from the member months to the total lives
covered under a particular policy for a policy year is administratively
burdensome. Accordingly, the proposed regulations provide that an
issuer using
[[Page 22697]]
the member months or state form method must use that method for all
policies for all years for which the fee applies. The Treasury
Department and the IRS solicit comments on whether there should be an
exception to this rule for issuers of calendar-year only policies who
want to switch from the member months or state form method to the
actual count or snapshot method and, if so, how to address the
transition in methods for the 2012 and 2019 calendar years.
Commentators noted that for 2012 and 2019 a partial year adjustment
will be needed because the member months data, which uses the calendar
year for all policies, will include in the member months for 2012 and
2019 lives covered under policies with a policy year that ends before
October 1, 2012, or after September 30, 2019, which are policies to
which the fee under section 4375 does not apply. The Treasury
Department and the IRS also understand that the data reported on state
forms is generally also based on the calendar year. To adjust for 2012
and 2019, the proposed regulations adopt a pro rata approach for
calculating the average number of lives covered using the member months
method or the state form method for 2012 and 2019. For example, the
member months number for 2012 is divided by 12 and the resulting number
is multiplied by one-quarter to arrive at the average number of lives
covered for October through December 2012. The proposed regulations
further treat the amount calculated under this pro rata approach as the
average number of lives covered for policies with policy years that end
on or after October 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2013. Similar rules
are provided for 2019.
The Treasury Department and the IRS understand that these proposed
regulations are being issued after the beginning of some policy years
to which the fee under section 4375 will apply. Because issuers that do
not use the member months method or state form method may not have
started counting lives covered for policy years that end on or after
October 1, 2012, but that began before May 14, 2012, issuers using the
actual count method may begin counting lives covered under a policy as
of May 14, 2012 rather than the first day of the policy year, and
divide by the appropriate number of days remaining in the policy year.
Similarly, for policy years that end on or after October 1, 2012, but
that began before May 14, 2012, issuers using the snapshot method may
use counts from quarters beginning on or after May 14, 2012 to
determine the average number of lives covered under the policy. The
Treasury Department and the IRS intend for these rules to facilitate
compliance for the initial policy years covered by section 4375.
Comments are requested as to whether any additional transition rules
under section 4375 are needed for this purpose.
Calculation of the Fee Under Section 4376
The fee imposed on a plan sponsor of an applicable self-insured
health plan under section 4376 is based on the average number of lives
covered under the plan. Notice 2011-35 invited comments on reasonable
methods that could reduce administrative burdens on plan sponsors that
must compute the average number of lives covered under an applicable
self-insured health plan. Notice 2011-35 also invited comments on safe
harbors that would permit a plan sponsor to determine the average
number of covered lives under the plan using a formula based on the
number of participants and one or more additional factors that account
for the number of dependents without requiring that every actual
dependent covered under the plan be counted.
Commentators generally favored using reasonable simplifying methods
and safe harbors to determine the average number of lives covered under
the plan. Some commentators suggested that the guidance permit the use
of snapshot data to determine the number of lives taken into account
for calculating the average number of lives covered during the plan
year. Commentators also suggested that plan sponsors be permitted to
determine the average number of lives covered during the year based on
information reported on the plan's Form 5500, ``Annual Return/Report of
Employee Benefit Plan.''
Commentators generally recognized that a method that is based on
Form 5500 reporting will have limited application because the
requirement to file a Form 5500 does not apply to all plan sponsors
that are subject to the fee under section 4376. These commentators also
noted that the Form 5500 does not include information on the number of
lives (participants and dependents) covered under the plan during the
plan year, but rather includes information only on the number of
participants on the first day and last day of the plan year.
Accordingly, the information reported on the Form 5500 would need to be
converted to a number that accurately represents the average number of
covered lives under the plan for the plan year.
To make it easier for plan sponsors to determine the average number
of lives covered under the plan for the plan year, these proposed
regulations provide plan sponsors a choice to use any of three
alternative methods. First, a plan sponsor may determine the average
number of lives covered under the plan for the plan year by calculating
the sum of the lives covered for each day of the plan year and dividing
that sum by the number of days in the plan year (the actual count
method). Second, a plan sponsor may determine the average number of
lives covered under the plan for the plan year by adding the totals of
lives covered on one date in each quarter, or an equal number of dates
for each quarter, and dividing the total by the number of dates on
which a count was made (the snapshot method). For this purpose, the
number of lives covered on a date may be determined as equal to either
the sum of the actual number of lives covered on the dates (the
snapshot count method) or the sum of (1) the number of participants
with self-only coverage on that date, plus (2) the product of the
number of participants with coverage other than self-only coverage on
the date and 2.35 (the snapshot factor method).\3\ The Treasury
Department and the IRS request comments on additional sources of data
that could be used to calculate a more accurate conversion factor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The 2.35 dependency factor reflects that all participants
with coverage other than self-only have coverage for themselves and
some number of dependents. The Treasury Department and the IRS
developed the factor, and other similar factors used in the
regulations, in consultation with Treasury Department economists and
in consultation with plan sponsors regarding the procedures they
currently use for estimating the number of covered individuals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third, a plan sponsor may determine the average number of lives
covered under the plan for the plan year based on a formula that
includes the number of participants actually reported on the Form 5500
for the applicable self-insured health plan for the plan year (the Form
5500 method). For a plan providing only self-only coverage, under the
Form 5500 method the plan sponsor may treat the average number of
covered lives under the plan for a plan year as the sum of the total
participants at the beginning and the end of the plan year, in each
case as reported on the Form 5500, divided by two.
For plans providing coverage that is not limited to the self-only
coverage, the Form 5500 does not identify whether the coverage is self-
only or family (or some other non-self-only coverage). Therefore, the
number of participants reported on the Form 5500 generally is converted
to covered lives by multiplying the number of participants on each date
by a factor of 2.0. (This
[[Page 22698]]
factor is lower than the 2.35 factor used in the snapshot factor method
because this factor takes into account participants with self-only
coverage that covers one life, as well as participants with other
coverage that covers two or more lives.) Accordingly, under the Form
5500 method for plans that provide coverage not limited to self-only
coverage, a plan sponsor may simply add the number of participants
reported for the beginning of the plan year to the number reported for
the end of the plan year to determine the average number of covered
lives for the plan year. The Treasury Department and the IRS request
comments on additional sources of data that could be used to calculate
a more accurate conversion factor.
The proposed regulations direct a plan sponsor to apply a single
method in determining the average number of lives covered under the
plan for the entire plan year. However, a plan sponsor is not required
to use the same method from one plan year to the next.
The Treasury Department and the IRS understand that these proposed
regulations are being issued after the beginning of some plan years to
which the fee under section 4376 will apply. Therefore, these proposed
regulations include a special rule for the fee under section 4376
applicable for a plan year that ends on or after October 1, 2012, and
began before July 11, 2012. Because self-insured plans generally are
not required to complete the Exhibit or determine the number of covered
lives for other regulatory purposes, under this special rule, a plan
sponsor may use any reasonable method to determine the average number
of lives covered under the plan for purposes of calculating the fee
under section 4376 for those plan years. For more information about the
return filing requirements and payment of the fees, see the section in
this preamble entitled ``Application of Excise Tax Procedural Rules
(Filing of Returns and Payment of Fees).''
Application of Subtitle F
In accordance with section 4377(c), references in subtitle F
(section 6001-7874) to ``taxes imposed by this title,'' ``internal
revenue tax,'' and similar references apply to the fees imposed by
sections 4375 and 4376. For example, the fees imposed by sections 4375
and 4376 are assessed pursuant to section 6201, collected pursuant to
sections 6301, 6321, and 6331, enforced pursuant to section 7602,
subject to examination and summons pursuant to section 7602, and
subject to confidentiality rules pursuant to section 6103, in the same
manner as other taxes imposed by the Code.
Sections 4375 and 4376 are in chapter 34 of the Code (Taxes on
Certain Insurance Policies). The deficiency procedures of sections
6211-6216 apply only to income, estate, and gift taxes imposed by
subtitle A (Income Taxes) and B (Estate and Gift Taxes) and the excise
taxes imposed by chapters 41-44. Because sections 4375 and 4376 are in
chapter 34, the deficiency procedures do not apply to the fee. Thus,
the IRS may assess and collect the fees using the procedures in
subtitle F without regard to the restrictions on assessment in section
6213 (relating to petitions to the Tax Court).
Application of Excise Tax Procedural Rules (Filing of Returns and
Payment of Fees)
The Excise Tax Procedural Regulations in 26 CFR part 40 contain
rules for depositing, paying, and return filing for a number of excise
taxes, including the excise taxes in chapter 34.
Under existing rules for chapter 34 excise taxes, taxpayers pay and
report these taxes quarterly on Form 720, ``Quarterly Federal Excise
Tax Return,'' by the last day of the first calendar month following the
calendar quarter for which it is filed. The proposed regulations amend
this rule so that issuers and plan sponsors will report and pay the
section 4375 and 4376 fees only once a year on Form 720, which will be
due by July 31 of each year. A person that files a Form 720 only to
report liability imposed by section 4375 or 4376 is not required to
file a Form 720 at other times during the year. A return will generally
cover policy years (section 4375) and plan years (section 4376) that
end during the preceding calendar year, or in the case of an issuer
that determines the average number of lives covered for purposes of
section 4375 using the member months method or the state form method,
the return is for all policies in effect during the previous calendar
year. The instructions for Form 720 inform filers how and when to file
and pay. These instructions require that the filer (the issuer or plan
sponsor, as applicable) have an Employer Identification Number (EIN) to
use in filing the Form 720.
Most excise taxes reported on Form 720 are required to be deposited
semimonthly. However, these proposed regulations do not require
semimonthly deposits of the fee imposed by section 4375 or 4376;
rather, full payment of the fee is due annually by the July 31 due date
of Form 720.
Any claim for a refund of the section 4375 or 4376 fees must be
filed on Form 8849, ``Claim for Refund of Excise Taxes,'' or Form 720X,
``Amended Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,'' in accordance with the
instructions for those forms.
These proposed regulations do not impose any specific recordkeeping
requirements for calculating the fees under sections 4375 and 4376.
However, see the instructions for Form 720 for general information on
recordkeeping requirements.
The IRS will revise the current Form 720 to reflect these fees.
Electronic Filing of Returns
Form 720 may be filed electronically. For more information on e-
file, see www.irs.gov/efile. Although electronic filing of the Form
720, ``Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,'' is not required, the IRS
encourages taxpayers to file the Form 720 electronically. Electronic
filing of Form 720 is quick and easy, and it will allow the IRS to
provide expedited and improved service and reliability to taxpayers
while reducing processing time and errors. Forms 720 can be submitted
on-line. A taxpayer wishing to file the Form 720 electronically must
submit it through an approved transmitter software developer. The IRS
has posted on its Web site contact information for all approved Form
720 e-file transmitters at https://www.irs.gov/efile/lists/0,,id=176152,00.html. To electronically file the Form 720, taxpayers
will incur the cost of the provider's required service fee for online
submission.
Third-Party Reporting and Payments
Notice 2011-35 requested comments on the ability of third parties
to act on behalf of a plan sponsor in complying with the requirements
of the fee under section 4376. A number of commentators suggested that
guidance should permit third parties to act on behalf of a plan sponsor
in reporting and paying the fee. Most of these commentators requested
that the Treasury Department and the IRS establish a special reporting
and filing regime for third parties that is different than the regime
for plan sponsors. Although the IRS has established limited third-party
reporting and payment regimes in certain instances (see for example,
Rev. Proc. 2007-38 (2007-1 CB 1442)) the IRS does not intend to adopt
such a program for the fee under section 4375 or the fee under section
4376 because the benefits of such a program would be outweighed by the
administrative burdens, particularly given the limited period over
which the fee will apply. See Sec. 601.601(d)(2).
[[Page 22699]]
Proposed Effective Date
These regulations are proposed to apply to policy and plan years
ending on or after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2019. Issuers
and plan sponsors may rely on these proposed regulations for guidance
pending the issuance of final regulations. Final regulations will be
effective as of the date these proposed regulations are published in
the Federal Register. If and to the extent future guidance is more
restrictive than the guidance in these proposed regulations, the future
guidance will be applied without retroactive effect.
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this notice of proposed rulemaking is
not a significant regulatory action as defined in Executive Order
12866, as supplemented by Executive Order 13653. Therefore, a
regulatory assessment is not required. It is hereby certified that
these proposed regulations will not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities. This certification is based
on the fact that small businesses generally do not have self-insured
health plans and that these regulations will therefore primarily affect
large corporations. Therefore, a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis under
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) is not required.
The Treasury Department and the IRS specifically solicit comments from
any party, particularly affected small entities, on the accuracy of
this certification. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, this
notice of proposed rulemaking has been submitted to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comments on its
impact on small business.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any written or electronic comments that
are submitted timely to the IRS. The Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on all aspects of the proposed rules. All comments
will be available for public inspection and copying.
A public hearing has been scheduled for August 8, 2012, beginning
at 10 a.m. in room the auditorium of the Internal Revenue Building,
1111 Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC. Due to building security
procedures, visitors must enter at the Constitution Avenue entrance. In
addition, all visitors must present photo identification to enter the
building. Because of access restrictions, visitors will not be admitted
beyond the immediate entrance more than 15 minutes before the hearing
starts. For information about having your name placed on the building
access list to attend the hearing, see the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section of this preamble.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) apply to the hearing. Persons who
wish to present oral comments at the hearing must submit written or
electronic comments and an outline of the topics to be discussed and
the time to be devoted to each topic by July 30, 2012. A period of 10
minutes will be allotted to each person for making comments. An agenda
showing the scheduling of the speakers will be prepared after the
deadline for receiving outlines has passed. Copies of the agenda will
be available free of charge at the hearing.
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these regulations are Rebecca L. Baxter,
Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products),
and R. Lisa Mojiri-Azad, Office of Division Counsel/Associate Chief
Counsel (Tax Exempt and Government Entities). However, other personnel
from the Treasury Department and the IRS participated in their
development.
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 40
Excise taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
26 CFR Part 46
Excise taxes, Insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR parts 40 and 46 are proposed to be amended as
follows:
PART 40--EXCISE TAX PROCEDURAL REGULATIONS
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 40 continues to read
in part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 40.0-1 is amended as follows:
1. Paragraph (a) is amended by removing from the third sentence the
language ``chapter 34 to taxes imposed on policies issued by foreign
insurers'' and adding ``chapter 34 to taxes imposed on certain
insurance policies'' in its place, and adding a new sentence after the
third sentence to read as follows:
Sec. 40.0-1 Introduction.
(a) * * * References in this part to ``taxes'' also include
references to the fees imposed by sections 4375 and 4376. * * *
* * * * *
Par. 3. Section 40.6011(a)-1 is amended by:
1. In paragraph (a)(2)(i), first sentence, the language ``paragraph
(b) of this section'' is removed and the language ``paragraphs (b) and
(c) of this section'' is added in its place.
2. Paragraph (c) is added.
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 40.6011(a)-1 Returns.
* * * * *
(c) Fees on health insurance policies and self-insured health
plans--(1) In general. A return that reports liability imposed by
section 4375 or 4376 is a return for policies or plans with policy or
plan years ending in the previous calendar year, or for issuers that
determine the average number of lives covered under a policy for
purposes of section 4375 using the member months method under Sec.
46.4375-1(c)(2)(v) of this chapter or the state form method under Sec.
46.4375-1(c)(2)(vi) of this chapter, the return is for all policies in
effect during the previous calendar year. The second sentence of
paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section (relating to filing quarterly
returns regardless of whether liability is incurred) does not apply to
a person that files a Form 720, ``Quarterly Federal Excise Tax
Return,'' only to report liability imposed by section 4375 or 4376.
(2) Effective/applicability date. This paragraph (c) is applicable
on April 17, 2012. This paragraph (c) applies to returns that report
liability imposed by section 4375 or 4376 for all policies and plans to
which section 4375 or 4376 applies.
Par. 4. Section 40.6071(a)-1 is amended as follows:
1. Paragraph (c) is revised.
2. Paragraph (d) is added.
The revision and addition read as follows:
Sec. 40.6071(a)-1 Time for filing returns.
* * * * *
(c) Fees on health insurance policies and self-insured health
plans. A return that reports liability for the fee imposed by section
4375 must be filed by July 31 of the calendar year immediately
following the last day of the policy year. For issuers that determine
the average number of lives covered under the policy for section 4375
using the member months method under Sec. 46.4375-1(c)(2)(v) of this
chapter or the state form method under Sec. 46.4375-
[[Page 22700]]
1(c)(2)(vi) of this chapter, the return must be filed by July 31 of the
immediately following calendar year. A return that reports liability
for the fee imposed by section 4376 for a plan year must be filed by
July 31 of the calendar year immediately following the last day of the
plan year. Thus, for example, a return that reports liability for the
fee imposed by section 4375 for the year ending on December 31, 2012,
must be filed by July 31, 2013. As another example, a return that
reports liability for the fee imposed by section 4376 for the plan year
ending on January 31, 2013, must be filed by July 31, 2014.
(d) Effective/applicability date. Paragraph (c) of this section is
applicable on April 17, 2012. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section
apply to returns for calendar quarters beginning on or after October 1,
2001, and paragraph (c) of this section applies to returns that report
liability imposed by section 4375 or 4376 for all policies and plans to
which section 4375 or 4376 applies.
Sec. 40.6091-1 [Amended]
Par. 5. Section 40.6091-1(a) is amended by removing the language
``paragraph (b) of this section, quarterly returns'' and by adding the
language ``paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, returns'' in its
place.
Par. 6. Section 40.6302(c)-1 is amended by revising the section
heading and paragraph (e)(1)(iv) to read as follows:
Sec. 40.6302(c)-1 Use of Government depositaries.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Sections 4375 and 4376 (relating to fees on health insurance
policies and self-insured health plans).
* * * * *
PART 46--EXCISE TAX ON CERTAIN INSURANCE POLICIES AND OBLIGATIONS
NOT IN REGISTERED FORM
Par. 7. The authority citation for part 46 continues to read in
part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *
Par. 8. In Part 46, the heading is revised to read as set forth
above.
Sec. 46.0-1 [Amended]
Par. 9. In Sec. 46.0-1, first sentence, the language ``policies
issued by foreign insurers'' is removed and the language ``certain
insurance policies'' is added in its place.
Sec. 46.0-2 [Removed]
Par. 10. Section 46.0-2 is removed.
Par. 11. In Part 46, subpart C is redesignated as subpart D and a
new subpart C is added to read as follows:
Subpart C--Fees on Insured and Self-Insured Health Plans
Sec
46.4375-1 Fee on issuers of specified health insurance policies.
46.4376-1 Fee on sponsors of self-insured health plans.
46.4377-1 Definitions and special rules.
Subpart C--Fees on Insured and Self-Insured Health Plans
Sec. 46.4375-1 Fee on issuers of specified health insurance policies.
(a) In general. An issuer of a specified health insurance policy is
liable for a fee imposed by section 4375 for policy years ending on or
after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2019. Paragraph (b) of
this section provides definitions that apply for purposes of section
4375 and this section. Paragraph (c) of this section provides rules for
calculating the fee under section 4375. Paragraph (d) of this section
provides the effective/applicability date. For rules relating to filing
the required return and paying the fee, see Sec. Sec. 40.6011(a)-1 and
40.6151(a)-1 of this chapter.
(b) Definitions. The following definitions apply for purposes of
section 4375 and this section. See also Sec. 46.4377-1 for additional
definitions.
(1) Specified health insurance policy--(i) In general. Except as
provided in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section and Sec. 46.4377-1,
specified health insurance policy means any accident or health
insurance policy (including a policy under a group health plan) issued
with respect to individuals residing in the United States (as defined
in Sec. 46.4377-1(a)(2)), including certain prepaid health coverage
arrangements as described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(ii) Exceptions. The term specified health insurance policy does
not include--
(A) Any insurance policy if substantially all of its coverage is of
excepted benefits described in section 9832(c);
(B) Any group policy issued to an employer where the facts and
circumstances show that the group policy was designed and issued
specifically to cover primarily employees who are working and residing
outside of the United States (see Sec. 46.4377-1(a)(3)); or
(C) Any stop loss or indemnity reinsurance policy.
(iii) Stop loss policy. For purposes of paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of
this section, stop loss policy means an insurance policy in which--
(A) The insurer that issues the policy to a person establishing or
maintaining a self-insured health plan becomes liable for all, or an
agreed upon portion of, losses that person incurs in covering the
applicable lives in excess of a specified amount; and
(B) The person establishing or maintaining the self-insured health
plan retains its liability to, and its contractual relationship with,
the applicable lives covered.
(iv) Indemnity reinsurance policy. For purposes of paragraph
(b)(1)(ii) of this section, indemnity reinsurance policy means an
agreement between two or more insurance companies under which--
(A) The reinsuring company agrees to accept and to indemnify the
issuing company for all or part of the risk of loss under policies
specified in the agreement; and
(B) The issuing company retains its liability to, and its
contractual relationship with, the applicable lives covered.
(2) Prepaid health coverage arrangement. The term prepaid health
coverage arrangement means an arrangement under which fixed payments or
premiums are received as consideration for a person's agreement to
provide or arrange for the provision of accident or health coverage to
individuals residing in the United States, regardless of how such
coverage is provided or arranged to be provided. For example, any
hospital or medical service policy or certificate, hospital or medical
service plan contract, or health maintenance organization contract is a
specified health insurance policy.
(c) Calculation of fee--(1) In general. The amount of the fee for a
policy for a policy year is equal to the product of the average number
of lives covered under the policy for the policy year (determined in
accordance with paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of this section) and the
applicable dollar amount (determined in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section). For purposes of computing the fee under this
paragraph (c), in the case of an issuer that determines the average
number of lives covered for all policies in effect during a calendar
year using the member months method under paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this
section or the state form method under paragraph (c)(2)(vi) of this
section, the applicable dollar amount with respect to such issuer's
policies for such calendar year is the applicable dollar amount for
policy years ending on December 31 of such calendar year (determined in
accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this section), except that the
applicable
[[Page 22701]]
dollar amount with respect to such an issuer's policies for calendar
year 2019 shall be the applicable dollar amount for policy years ending
on September 30, 2019. For more information, see the examples in
paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(B), (c)(2)(iv)(B), (c)(2)(v)(B), and
(c)(2)(vi)(B) of this section.
(2) Determination of the average number of lives covered under a
policy--(i) In general. To determine the average number of lives
covered under a specified health insurance policy during a policy year,
an issuer must use one of the following methods--
(A) The actual count method (described in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of
this section);
(B) The snapshot method (described in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this
section);
(C) The member months method (described in paragraph (c)(2)(v) of
this section); or
(D) The state form method (described in paragraph (c)(2)(vi) of
this section).
(ii) Consistency requirements. An issuer must use the same method
of calculating the average number of lives covered under a policy
consistently for the duration of the year. In addition, for all
policies for which a liability is reported on a Form 720, ``Quarterly
Federal Excise Tax Return,'' for a particular year, the issuer must use
the same method of computing lives covered. An issuer that determines
the average number of lives covered by using the actual count method
described in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section or the snapshot
method described in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section may change its
method of computing the average lives covered to the snapshot method or
actual count method, provided that the issuer uses the same method for
computing the average lives covered for all policies for which a
liability is reported on the Form 720 for that year. For example, an
issuer with a policy having a policy year that ends on June 30, Policy
A, may determine the average number of lives covered under Policy A for
July 1, 2013, to June 30, 2014, using the actual count method if the
issuer uses the actual count method for all policies for which a
liability will be reported on the Form 720 due by July 31, 2015 (the
due date for return that will include the liability for the July 2013
to June 2014 policy year for Policy A). The issuer may change its
method for determining the average number of lives covered under Policy
A to the snapshot method for the July 1, 2014, to June 30, 2015, policy
year, provided that the snapshot method is used for all policies for
which a liability will be reported on the Form 720 due by July 31, 2016
(the due date for return that will include the liability for the July
2014 to June 2015 policy year for Policy A). An issuer that determines
the average number of lives covered by using the member months method
under paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this section or the state form method
under paragraph (c)(2)(vi) of this section must use the same method for
calculating lives covered for all policy years for which the fee
applies.
(iii) Actual count method--(A) Calculation method. An issuer may
determine the average number of lives covered under a policy for a
policy year by adding the total number of lives covered for each day of
the policy year and dividing that total by the number of days in the
policy year.
(B) Example. The following example illustrates the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(iii)(A) of this section:
Example. Insurance Company A issues three policies that are in
effect during 2014, Group Health Insurance Policy A, which has a
policy year from December 1 to November 30, Group Health Insurance
Policy B, which has a policy year from March 1 to February 28, and
Group Health Insurance Policy C, which has a policy year from
January 1 to December 31. To calculate the average number of lives
covered for 2014, Insurance Company A must calculate the average
number of lives covered for each of its three policies for the
policy year that ends in 2014. Insurance Company A chooses to use
the actual count method under paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(A) of this
section to determine average lives covered for policies having a
policy year that ends in 2014. Insurance Company A calculates the
sum of lives covered under Policy A for each day of the policy year
ending November 30, 2014, as 3,285,000. The average number of lives
covered under Policy A for the policy year ending November 30, 2014,
is 3,285,000 divided by 365, or 9,000. Insurance Company A
calculates the sum of lives covered under Policy B for each day of
the policy year ending February 28, 2014, as 547,500. The average
number of lives covered under Policy B for the policy year ending on
February 28, 2014, is 547,500 divided by 365, or 1,500. Insurance
Company A calculates the sum of lives covered under Policy C for
each day of the policy year ending December 31, 2014, as 4,380,000.
The average number of lives covered under Policy C for the policy
year ending December 31, 2014, is 4,380,000 divided by 365, or
12,000. To calculate the section 4375 fee under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section for calendar year 2014, Insurance Company A must first
determine the applicable dollar amount for each policy under
paragraph (c)(4) of this section and multiply that amount by the
average number of lives covered for that policy. Insurance Company A
then adds the total fees for all three policies to determine the
total fee under section 4375 that it must pay for calendar year
2014.
(iv) Snapshot method--(A) Calculation method. An issuer may
determine the average number of lives covered under a policy for a
policy year by adding the totals of lives covered on one date in each
quarter of the policy year, or more dates if an equal number of dates
is used for each quarter, and dividing that total by the number of
dates on which a count was made. For this purpose, the date or dates
for each quarter must be the same (for example, the first day of the
quarter, the last day of the quarter, or the first day of each month).
(B) Example. The following example illustrates the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(iv)(A) of this section:
Example. Insurance Company B issues three policies that are in
effect during 2014, Group Health Insurance Policy A, which has a
policy year from December 1 to November 30, Group Health Insurance
Policy B, which has a policy year from March 1 to February 28, and
Group Health Insurance Policy C, which has a policy year from
January 1 to December 31. To calculate the average number of lives
covered for 2014, Company A must calculate the average number of
lives covered for each of its three policies for the policy year
that ends in 2014. Insurance Company B chooses to determine its
average lives covered using the snapshot method for all policies
that have a policy year that ends in 2014 and chooses to count lives
covered on the first day of each quarter of the policy years. On
December 1, 2013, Policy A covers 8,900 lives covered, on March 1,
2014, 9,100 lives covered, on June 1, 2014, 9,050 lives covered, and
on September 1, 2014, 9,050 lives covered. Insurance Company B
treats the average number of lives covered under Policy A for the
policy year ending November 30, 2014, as 36,100 (8,900 + 9,100 +
9,050 + 9,050) divided by 4, or 9,025. On March 1, 2013, Policy B
covers 1,500 lives covered, on June 1, 2013, 1,350 lives covered, on
September 1, 2013, 1,400 lives covered, and on December 1, 2013,
1,550 lives covered. Insurance Company B treats the average number
of lives covered under Policy B for the policy year ending February
28, 2014, as 5,800 (1,500 + 1,350 + 1,400 + 1,550) divided by 4, or
1,450. On January 1, 2014, Policy C covers 12,500 lives covered, on
April 1, 2014, 12,250 lives covered, on July 1, 2014, 12,000 lives
covered, and on October 1, 2014, 11,250 lives covered. Insurance
Company B treats the average number of lives covered under Policy C
for the policy year ending December 31, 2014, as 47,750 (12,500 +
12,250 + 12,000 + 11,250) divided by 4, or 12,000. To calculate the
section 4375 fee under paragraph (c)(1) of this section for calendar
year 2014, Insurance Company B must first determine the applicable
dollar amount for each policy under paragraph (c)(4) of this section
and multiply that amount by the number of average lives covered for
that policy. Insurance Company B then adds the total fees for all
three policies to determine the total fee under section 4375 that it
must pay for calendar year 2014.
(v) Member months method--(A) Calculation method. An issuer may
[[Page 22702]]
determine the average number of lives covered under all policies in
effect for a calendar year based on the member months (an amount that
equals the sum of the totals of lives covered on pre-specified days in
each month of the reporting period) reported on the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) Supplemental Health Care
Exhibit filed for that calendar year. Under this method, the average
number of lives covered under the policies in effect for the calendar
year equals the member months divided by 12.
(B) Example. The following example illustrates the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(v)(A) of this section:
Example. Insurance Company C chooses to determine the average
number of lives covered for all years to which the section 4375 fee
applies using the member months method of paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A) of
this section. Insurance Company C reports 12,000,000 as its member
months on the NAIC Supplemental Health Care Exhibit filed for
calendar year 2013. Under the member months method, Insurance
Company C calculates the average number of lives covered for all its
specified health insurance policies in force during calendar year
2013 by dividing 12,000,000 (member months) by 12 (number of months
in the reporting period), which equals 1,000,000. To determine the
section 4375 fee it must pay for calendar year 2013, Insurance
Company C multiplies 1,000,000 by the applicable dollar amount that
is in effect at the end of the calendar year under paragraph (c)(4)
of this section.
(vi) State form method--(A) Calculation method. An issuer that is
not required to file NAIC annual financial statements may determine the
number of lives covered under all policies in effect for the calendar
year using a form that is filed with the issuer's state of domicile and
a method similar to that described in paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this
section, if the form reports the number of lives covered in the same
manner as member months are reported on the NAIC Supplemental Health
Care Exhibit.
(B) Example. The following example illustrates the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(vi)(A) of this section:
Example. Insurance Company D is not required to file the NAIC
Supplemental Health Care Exhibit, but files a form with its state of
domicile. Insurance Company D chooses to determine the average
number of lives covered for all years to which the section 4375 fee
applies using the state form method of paragraph (c)(2)(vi)(A) of
this section. The state form reports the number of lives covered in
the same manner as member months is reported on the NAIC
Supplemental Health Care Exhibit. For calendar year 2013, Insurance
Company D reports 12,000,000 as its equivalent member months on the
state form. Under the state form method, Insurance Company D
calculates the average number of lives covered for all of its
specified health insurance policies in force during calendar year
2013 by dividing 12,000,000 (equivalent member months) by 12 (number
of months in the reporting period), which equals 1,000,000. To
determine the section 4375 fee it must pay for calendar year 2013,
Insurance Company D multiplies 1,000,000 by the applicable dollar
amount that is in effect at the end of the calendar year under
paragraph (c)(4) of this section.
(3) Special rules for the first year and the last year the fee is
in effect--(i) Calculation of the average number of lives covered under
the policy for the first year the fee is in effect. For issuers that
determine the average number of lives covered using data reported on
the 2012 NAIC Supplemental Health Care Exhibit or a permitted state
form that covers the 2012 calendar year, the average number of lives
covered under all policies in effect for the 2012 calendar year equals
the average number of lives covered for that year (as determined under
paragraph (c)(2)(v) or (vi) of this section) multiplied by \1/4\. The
resulting number is deemed to be the average number of lives covered
for policies with policy years ending on or after October 1, 2012, and
before January 1, 2013. For policy years beginning before May 14, 2012
and ending on or after October 1, 2012, issuers that determine the
average number of lives covered using the actual count method under
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section may calculate the average number
of lives covered using data from the period beginning May 14, 2012
through the end of the policy year. For policy years beginning before
May 14, 2012 and ending on or after October 1, 2012, issuers that
determine the average number of lives covered using the snapshot method
under paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section may calculate the average
number of lives covered using dates from the quarters remaining in the
policy year starting on or after May 14, 2012. If an abbreviated year
is used, the issuer will divide the number of lives covered by the
number of days from May 14, 2012 through the end of the policy year
(for the actual count method) or the number of days on which a count
was made (for the snapshot method).
(ii) Calculation of the average number of lives covered under the
policy for the last year the fee is in effect. For issuers that
determine the average number of lives covered using data reported on
the 2019 NAIC Supplemental Health Care Exhibit or a permitted state
form that covers the 2019 calendar year, the average number of lives
covered for all policies in effect during the 2019 calendar year equals
the average number of lives covered for that year (as determined under
paragraph (c)(2)(v) or (vi) of this section) multiplied by \3/4\. The
resulting number is deemed to be the average number of lives covered
for policies with policy years ending on or after January 1, 2019, and
before October 1, 2019.
(iii) Example. The following examples illustrate the principles of
paragraph (c)(3) of this section:
Example 1. Insurance Company E issues Group Health Insurance
Policy C, which has a policy year that ends on November 30, 2012.
Insurance Company E determines the average number of lives covered
under a policy by using the actual count method. Under that method,
for that policy year, Insurance Company E calculates the sum of
lives covered under Policy C for each day between May 14, 2012 and
November 30, 2012 as 10,000. The average number of lives covered
under Policy C for that policy year is 10,000 divided by the number
of days from May 14, 2012 through November 30, 2012. Alternatively,
Insurance Company E could have counted the number of lives covered
for the entire policy year and divided the sum by 365.
Example 2. Insurance Company F reports 12,000,000 as its member
months on its NAIC Supplemental Health Care Exhibit filed for
calendar year 2012. Under the member months method, Insurance
Company F calculates the average number of lives covered for 2012 by
dividing 12,000,000 (member months) by 12 (number of months in the
reporting period), and then multiplying the result (1,000,000) by
\1/4\, which equals 250,000. Accordingly, the average number of
lives covered for policies with policy years ending on or after
October 1, 2012, and before January 1, 2013, is 250,000.
(4) Applicable dollar amount. For policy years ending on or after
October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2013, the applicable dollar
amount is $1. For policy years ending on or after October 1, 2013, and
before October 1, 2014, the applicable dollar amount is $2. For any
policy years ending in any fiscal year beginning on or after October 1,
2014, the applicable dollar amount is the sum of--
(i) The applicable dollar amount for the policy year ending in the
previous fiscal year; plus
(ii) The amount equal to the product of--
(A) The applicable dollar amount for the policy year ending in the
previous fiscal year; and
(B) The percentage increase in the projected per capita amount of
the National Health Expenditures most recently released by the
Department of Health and Human Services before the beginning of the
fiscal year.
[[Page 22703]]
(d) Effective/applicability date. This section is effective on
April 17, 2012. This section applies for policies with policy years
ending on or after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2019.
Sec. 46.4376-1 Fee on sponsors of self-insured health plans.
(a) In general. A plan sponsor of an applicable self-insured health
plan is liable for a fee imposed by section 4376 for plans with plan
years ending on or after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2019.
Paragraph (b) of this section provides the definitions that apply for
purposes of section 4376 and this section. Paragraph (c) of this
section provides the requirements for calculating the fee imposed by
section 4376. Paragraph (d) of this section provides the effective/
applicability date. For rules relating to filing the required return
and paying the fee, see Sec. Sec. 40.6011(a)-1 and 40.6151(a)-1 of
this chapter.
(b) Definitions. The following definitions apply for purposes of
section 4376 and this section. See Sec. 46.4377-1 for additional
definitions.
(1) Applicable self-insured health plan--(i) In general. Except as
provided in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section and Sec. 46.4377-1,
applicable self-insured health plan means a plan that provides for
accident or health coverage (within the meaning of Sec. 46.4377-1(a))
if any portion of the coverage is provided other than through an
insurance policy and the plan is established or maintained--
(A) By one or more employers for the benefit of their employees or
former employees;
(B) By one or more employee organizations for the benefit of their
members or former members;
(C) Jointly by one or more employers and one or more employee
organizations for the benefit of employees or former employees;
(D) By a voluntary employees' beneficiary association, as described
in section 501(c)(9);
(E) By an organization described in section 501(c)(6); or
(F) By a multiple employer welfare arrangement (as defined in
section 3(40) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA)), a rural electric cooperative (as defined in section
3(40)(B)(iv) of ERISA), or a rural cooperative association (as defined
in section 3(40)(B)(v) of ERISA).
(ii) Exceptions. The term applicable self-insured health plan does
not include any of the following:
(A) A plan that provides benefits substantially all of which are
excepted benefits, as defined in section 9832(c). For example, a health
flexible spending arrangement (health FSA) (as described in section
106(c)(2)) that satisfies the requirements to be treated as an excepted
benefit under section 9832(c) (see also Sec. 54.9831-1(c)(3)(v) of
this chapter) is not an applicable self-insured health plan. A health
FSA that is not treated as an excepted benefit under section 9832(c) is
an applicable self-insured health plan.
(B) An employee assistance program, disease management program, or
wellness program if the program does not provide significant benefits
in the nature of medical care or treatment.
(iii) Multiple self-insured arrangements established or maintained
by the same plan sponsor. For purposes of section 4376, two or more
arrangements established or maintained by the same plan sponsor that
provides for accident and health coverage (within the meaning of Sec.
46.4377-1(a)) other than through an insurance policy and that have the
same plan year may be treated as a single applicable self-insured
health plan for purposes of calculating the fee imposed by section
4376. For example, if a plan sponsor establishes or maintains a self-
insured arrangement providing major medical benefits, and a separate
self-insured arrangement with the same plan year providing prescription
drug benefits, the two arrangements may be treated as one applicable
self-insured health plan so that the same life covered under each
arrangement would count as only one covered life under the plan.
Similarly, if a plan sponsor provides a Health Reimbursement
Arrangement (HRA) that is integrated with another applicable self-
insured health plan that provides major medical coverage, the HRA and
the major medical plan may be treated as one applicable self-insured
health plan.
(2) Plan sponsor--(i) In general. The term plan sponsor means--
(A) The employer, in the case of an applicable self-insured health
plan established or maintained by a single employer;
(B) The employee organization, in the case of an applicable self-
insured health plan established or maintained by an employee
organization;
(C) The joint board of trustees, in the case of a multiemployer
plan (as defined in section 414(f));
(D) The committee, in the case of a multiple employer welfare
arrangement;
(E) The cooperative or association that establishes or maintains an
applicable self-insured health plan established or maintained by a
rural electric cooperative (as defined in section 3(40)(B)(iv) of
ERISA) or rural cooperative association (as defined in section
3(40)(B)(v) of ERISA);
(F) The trustee, in the case of an applicable self-insured health
plan established or maintained by a voluntary employees' beneficiary
association (meaning that the voluntary employees' beneficiary
association is not merely serving as a funding vehicle for a plan that
is established or maintained by an employer or other person); or
(G) In the case of an applicable self-insured health plan the plan
sponsor of which is not described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(A) through
(F) of this section, the person identified by the terms of the document
under which the plan is operated as the plan sponsor, or the person
designated by terms of the document under which the plan is operated as
the plan sponsor for section 4376 purposes, provided that designation
is made, and that person has consented to the designation, by no later
than the date by which the return paying the fee under section 4376 for
that plan year is required to be filed, after which date that
designation for that plan year may not be changed or revoked, and
provided further that a person may be designated as the plan sponsor
only if the person is one of the persons maintaining the plan (for
example, one of the employers that is maintaining the plan with one or
more other employers or employee organizations).
(H) In the case of an applicable self-insured health plan the
sponsor of which is not described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(A) through
(F) of this section, and for which no identification or designation of
a plan sponsor has been made pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i)(G) of this
section, each employer that maintains the plan (with respect to
employees of that employer), each employee organization that maintains
the plan (with respect to members of that employee organization), and
each board of trustees, cooperative or association that maintains the
plan, meaning that each plan sponsor must file a separate Form 720,
``Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return,'' reflecting its separate
liability under section 4376.
(ii) Example. The following examples illustrate the principles of
paragraph (b)(2) of this section:
Example 1. Employer XYZ is a holding company with no employees
that owns all the issued and outstanding shares of Employer X,
Employer Y, and Employer Z. Employer X, Employer Y, and Employer Z
have established the XYZ Group Health Plan to provide accident and
health coverage, provided other than through an insurance policy,
for the benefit of their employees. The
[[Page 22704]]
XYZ Group Health Plan has a calendar year plan year. In addition,
there is no plan sponsor identified or designated in the plan
document. As a self-insured health plan for employees of two or more
employers, the XYZ Group Health Plan is an applicable self-insured
health plan under section 4376(c)(2)(A) and paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A)
of this section. However, a plan sponsor is not identified or
designated in the governing plan document. Accordingly, the plan
sponsor for purposes of section 4376 is identified under paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(H) of this section as Employer X, Employer Y, and Employer
Z, each with respect to its own employees covered under the plan.
Accordingly, Employer X, Employer Y, and Employer Z each must file a
Form 720 reflecting their separate liabilities under section 4376,
calculated based upon lives covered that are employees of that
employer, or spouses, dependents, or other beneficiaries of
employees of that employer and the applicable dollar amount in
effect for the plan year.
Example 2. The same facts as Example 1, except that the
governing plan document designates Employer X as the plan sponsor of
the XYZ Group Health Plan for purposes of the fee under section
4376. Accordingly, the plan sponsor for purposes of section 4376 is
identified under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(G) of this section as Employer
X. Employer X must file a Form 720 reflecting liabilities under
section 4376, calculated based upon lives covered that are employees
of Employer X, Employer Y, or Employer Z, or spouses, dependents, or
other beneficiaries of employees of those employers and the
applicable dollar amount in effect for the plan year.
(c) Calculation of fee--(1) In general. The amount of the fee for a
plan year is equal to the product of the average number of lives
covered under the plan for the plan year (determined in accordance with
paragraph (c)(2) of this section) and the applicable dollar amount
(determined in accordance with paragraph (c)(3) of this section). For
more information, see the examples in paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(B),
(c)(2)(iv)(D), and (c)(2)(v)(B) of this section.
(2) Determination of the average number of covered lives under the
plan--(i) In general. To determine the average number of lives covered
under an applicable self-insured health plan during a plan year, a plan
sponsor must use one of the following--
(A) The actual count method (described in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of
this section);
(B) The snapshot dates method (described in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of
this section); or
(C) The Form 5500 method (described in paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this
section).
(ii) Consistency within plan year. A plan sponsor must use the same
method of calculating the average number of lives covered under the
plan consistently for the duration of the plan year. However, a plan
sponsor may use a different method from one plan year to the next.
(iii) Actual count method--(A) Calculation method. A plan sponsor
may determine the average number of lives covered under a plan for a
plan year by adding the totals of lives covered for each day of the
plan year and dividing that total by the number of days in the plan
year.
(B) Example. The following example illustrates the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(iii)(A) of this section:
Example. Employer A is the plan sponsor of the Employer A Self-
Insured Health Plan, which has a calendar year plan year. Employer A
calculates the sum of covered lives under the plan for each day of
the plan year ending December 31, 2013 as 3,285,000. The average
number of covered lives under the plan for the plan year ending
December 31, 2013 is 3,285,000 divided by 365, or 9,000. To
calculate the section 4376 fee for the plan under paragraph (c)(1)
of this section for the plan year ending December 31, 2013, Employer
A must determine the applicable dollar amount under paragraph (c)(3)
of this section and multiply that amount by the average number of
lives covered under the plan.
(iv) Snapshot methods--(A) In general. A plan sponsor may determine
the average number of lives covered under a plan for a plan year by
adding the totals of lives covered on one date in each quarter, or more
dates if an equal number of dates are used for each quarter, and
dividing that total by the number of dates on which a count was made.
For this purpose, the date or dates for each quarter must be the same
(for example, the first day of the quarter, the last day of the
quarter, the first day of each month, etc.). For purposes of this
paragraph (c)(2)(iv), the number of lives covered on a designated date
may be determined using either the snapshot factor method described in
paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) of this section or the snapshot count method
described in paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(C) of this section.
(B) Snapshot factor method. Under the snapshot factor method, the
number of lives covered on a date is equal to the sum of the number of
participants with self-only coverage on that date, plus the product of
the number of participants with coverage other than self-only coverage
on the date and 2.35.
(C) Snapshot count method. Under the snapshot count method, the
number of lives covered on a date equals the actual number of lives
covered on the designated date.
(D) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(iv) of this section:
Example 1. Employer B is the plan sponsor of the Employer B
Self-Insured Health Plan, which has a calendar year plan year.
Employer B has designated the first day of each quarter of the plan
year as the date that Employer B counts the covered lives under the
Employer B Self-Insured Health Plan. On January 1, 2013, Employer B
Self-Insured Health Plan covers 2,000 covered lives, on April 1,
2013, 2,100 covered lives, on July 1, 2013, 2,050 covered lives, and
on October 1, 2013, 2,050 covered lives. Under the snapshot count
method, Employer B must determine the average number of covered
lives under the Employer B Self-Insured Health Plan for the plan
year ending December 31, 2013 as 8,200 (2,000 + 2,100 + 2,050 +
2,050) divided by 4, or 2,050. To calculate the section 4376 fee
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section for the plan year ending
December 31, 2013, Employer B must determine the applicable dollar
amount under paragraph (c)(3) of this section and multiply that
amount by the average number of lives covered under the plan.
Example 2. Same facts as Example 1, except Employer B
determines the number of covered lives not covered by self-only
coverage based on the number of participants with coverage other
than self-only multiplied by 2.35 (the factor set forth in
(c)(2)(iv) of this section). On January 1, 2013, Employer B Self-
Insured Health Plan provides self-only coverage to 600 employees and
other than self-only coverage to 800 employees. On April 1, 2013,
Employer B Self-Insured Health Plan provides self-only coverage to
608 employees and other than self-only coverage to 800 employees. On
July 1, 2013 and October 1, 2013, Employer B Self-Insured Health
Plan provides self-only coverage to 610 employees and other than
self-only coverage to 809 employees. Under the snapshot factor
method, Employer B must determine the average number of covered
lives under the Employer B Self-Insured Health Plan for the plan
year ending December 31, 2013 as 9,988 [(600+(800 x 2.35)) + (608 +
(800 x 2.35)) + (610 + (809 x 2.35)) + (610 + (809 x 2.35))] divided
by 4, or 2,497. To calculate the section 4376 fee under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section for the plan year ending December 31, 2013,
Employer B must determine the applicable dollar amount under
paragraph (c)(3) of this section and multiply that amount by the
average number of lives covered under the plan.
(v) Form 5500 method--(A) Calculation method. A plan sponsor may
determine the average number of lives covered under a plan for a plan
year based on the number of reportable participants for the Form 5500,
``Annual Return/Report of Employee Benefit Plan,'' that is filed for
the applicable self-insured health plan for that plan year. For
purposes of this paragraph (c)(2)(v), the average number of lives
covered under the plan for the plan year for a plan offering only self-
only coverage equals the sum of total participants covered at the
beginning and the end of the plan year, as reported
[[Page 22705]]
on the Form 5500 filed for the applicable self-insured health plan,
divided by 2. For purposes of this paragraph (c)(2)(v), the average
number of lives covered under the plan for the plan year for a plan
offering self-only coverage and coverage other than self-only coverage
equals the sum of total participants covered at the beginning and the
end of the plan year, as reported on the Form 5500 filed for the
applicable self-insured health plan.
(B) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)(v)(A) of this section:
Example 1. Employer C is the plan sponsor of the Employer C
Self-Insured Health Plan, which has a fiscal year plan year ending
on July 31, 2013 and offers only self-only coverage. Employer C
files a Form 5500 for the Employer C Self-Insured Health Plan for
the plan year ending July 31, 2013 reflecting 4,000 plan
participants on the first day of the plan year and 4,200 plan
participants on the last day of the plan year. For purposes of
calculating the fee under section 4376 using the Form 5500 method,
Employer C must treat the number of covered lives for the plan year
ending July 31, 2013 as equal to the sum of 4,000 and 4,200 or
8,200, divided by 2, or 4,100. To calculate the section 4376 fee
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section for the plan year ending July
31, 2013, Employer C must determine the applicable dollar amount
under paragraph (c)(3) of this section and multiply that amount by
the average number of lives covered under the plan.
Example 2. Same facts as Example 1, except that the Employer C
Self-Insured Health plan offers self-only coverage and family
coverage. For purposes of calculating the fee under section 4376
using the Form 5500 method, Employer C must treat the number of
covered lives for the plan year ending July 31, 2013 as equal to the
sum of 4,000 and 4,200, or 8,200. To calculate the section 4376 fee
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section for the plan year ending July
31, 2013, Employer C must determine the applicable dollar amount
under paragraph (c)(3) of this section and multiply that amount by
the average number of lives covered under the plan.
(vi) Special rule for health FSAs and HRAs. For purposes of this
section, if a plan sponsor does not maintain an applicable self-insured
health plan other than a health flexible spending arrangement (health
FSA) (as described in section 106(c)(2)) or a health reimbursement
arrangement (as described in Notice 2002-45 (2002-2 CB 93)) (HRA), the
plan sponsor may treat each participant's health FSA or HRA as covering
a single covered life (and therefore the plan sponsor is not required
to include as covered lives any spouse, dependent, or other beneficiary
of the individual participant in the health FSA or HRA, as applicable).
If a health FSA or HRA that is an applicable self-insured health plan
has the same plan sponsor as another applicable self-insured health
plan other than a health FSA or HRA, the two arrangements may be
treated as a single plan under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section.
However, the special counting rule in this paragraph applies only for
purposes of the health FSA or HRA and, therefore, applies only for
purposes of the participants in the health FSA or HRA that do not
participate in the other applicable self-insured health plan. (The
participants in the health FSA or HRA that participate in the other
applicable self-insured health plan will be counted in accordance with
the method applied for counting lives under that other plan as
described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.) See Sec.
601.601(d)(2) of this chapter.
(vii) Special rule for the first year the fee is in effect.
Notwithstanding paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section, for plan years
beginning before July 11, 2012 and ending on or after October 1, 2012,
a plan sponsor may determine the average number of lives covered under
the plan for the plan year using any reasonable method.
(3) Applicable dollar amount. For plan years ending on or after
October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2013, the applicable dollar
amount is $1. For plan years ending on or after October 1, 2013, and
before October 1, 2014, the applicable dollar amount is $2. For any
plan year ending in any fiscal year beginning on or after October 1,
2014, the applicable dollar amount is equal to the sum of--
(i) The applicable dollar amount for plan years ending in the
previous fiscal year; plus
(ii) The amount equal to the product of--
(A) The applicable dollar amount for plan years ending in the
previous fiscal year; and
(B) The percentage increase in the projected per capita amount of
the National Health Expenditures most recently released by the
Department of Health and Human Services before the beginning of the
fiscal year.
(d) Effective/applicability date. This section is effective on
April 17, 2012. This section applies for plan years that end on or
after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2019.
Sec. 46.4377-1 Definitions and special rules.
(a) Definitions. The following definitions apply for purposes of
sections 4375 and 4376 and Sec. Sec. 46.4375-1 and 46.4376-1.
(1) Accident and health coverage. The term accident and health
coverage means any coverage that, if provided by an insurance policy,
would cause such policy to be a specified health policy (as defined in
section 4375(c)).
(2) Individual residing in the United States--(i) The term
individual residing in the United States means an individual with a
place of abode in the United States.
(ii) Determination of place of abode. For purposes of paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, an issuer or a plan sponsor may rely on the
most recent address on file with the issuer or plan sponsor and may
treat the primary insured and the primary insured's spouse, dependents,
or other beneficiaries covered by the policy, as having the same place
of abode. For this purpose, the primary insured is the individual
covered by the policy other than due to that individual's status as the
spouse, dependent, or other beneficiary of another covered individual.
(3) United States. The term United States includes American Samoa,
Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands,
and any other possession of the United States.
(4) Fiscal year. The term fiscal year means the year beginning on
October 1 and ending on the following September 30.
(b) Treatment of exempt governmental programs--(1) In general. The
fees imposed by sections 4375 and 4376 do not apply to any covered life
under an exempt governmental program as defined in paragraph (b)(2) of
this section.
(2) Exempt governmental program. For purposes of this section,
exempt governmental program means any--
(i) Insurance program established under title XVIII of the Social
Security Act;
(ii) Medical assistance program established by title XIX or XXI of
the Social Security Act;
(iii) Program established by Federal law for providing medical care
(other than through insurance policies) to individuals (or their
spouses and dependents) by reason of such individuals being (or having
been) members of the Armed Forces of the United States; and
(iv) Program established by Federal law for providing medical care
(other than through insurance policies) to members of Indian tribes (as
defined in section 4(d) of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act).
(c) Effective/applicability date. This section is effective on
April 17, 2012. This section applies to all policies and
[[Page 22706]]
plans to which section 4375 or 4376 applies.
Steven T. Miller,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2012-9173 Filed 4-12-12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P