2013
· Health plans must implement uniform
standards for electronic exchange of health information to reduce paperwork and
administrative costs.
· Contributions to flexible savings accounts
will be limited to $2,500 per year, indexed by the Consumer Price Index in
subsequent years.
· The Employer Medicare Part D subsidy
deduction will be eliminated. Employers will lose the tax deduction for
subsidizing prescription drug plans for Medicare Part D-eligible retirees.
· There will be increases to the income threshold
from 7.5 percent to 10 percent of adjusted gross income. Those older than 65
can claim the 7.5 percent deduction through 2016.
· The hospital insurance tax will increase
0.9 percentage points for those earning more than $200,000 ($250,000 for
married filing jointly), and it includes net investment income.
· A 2.9 percent excise tax on the first sale
of medical devices will be established. Excepted are eyeglasses, contact
lenses, hearing aids or other items for individual use.
2014
· Citizens will be required to have
acceptable coverage or pay a penalty of $95 in 2014, $325 in 2015, $695 (or up
to 2.5 percent of income) in 2016. Families will pay half the amount for
children, up to a cap of $2,250 per family. After 2016, penalties are indexed
to Consumer Price Index.
· Workers who are exempt from individual
responsibility for coverage but don't qualify for tax credits can take their
employer contribution and join an exchange plan.
· Companies with 50 or more employees must
offer coverage to employees or pay a $2,000 penalty per employee after their
first 30 if at least one of their employees receives a tax credit. Waiting
periods before insurance takes effect is limited to 90 days. Employers who
offer coverage but whose employees receive tax credits will pay $3,000 for each
worker receiving a tax credit.
· Insurers can no longer refuse to sell or
renew policies because of an individual's health status. Health plans can no
longer exclude coverage for pre-existing conditions. Insurers can't charge
higher rates because of heath status, gender or other factors.
· Health plans will be prohibited from
imposing annual limits on coverage.
· Health insurance exchanges will open in
each state to individuals and small employers to comparison shop for
standardized health packages.
· Credits will be available through exchanges
for those whose income is above Medicaid eligibility and below 400 percent of
poverty level who are not eligible for or offered other acceptable coverage.
· Medicaid eligibility will increase to 133
percent of poverty for all nonelderly individuals to ensure that people obtain
affordable health care in the most efficient and appropriate manner. States
will receive increased federal funding to cover these new populations.
· An annual health insurance provider fee
will be Imposed across the health insurance sector according to insurers'
market share to companies whose total premiums exceed $25 million.
2018
· 2018 Taxing
"Cadillac" plans: An excise tax will be imposed on high-cost,
employer-provided health plans beyond $27,500 for family coverage and $10,200
for single coverage; it will increase to $30,950 for families and $11,850 for
individuals, retirees and employees in high-risk professions.
Sources: House Ways and Means, Energy and Commerce, and Education and Labor committees; Kaiser Family Foundation; CNN.com