About 7.5 million Americans paid an average penalty of $200 for not
having health insurance in 2014 — the first year most Americans were
required to have coverage under the Affordable Care Act, the Internal
Revenue Service said Tuesday.
By
contrast, taxpayers filing three-quarters of the 102 million returns
received by the IRS so far this year checked a box indicating they had
qualifying insurance coverage all year.
Counting another 7
million dependents who weren't required to report their coverage but
also filed returns, the proportion with qualifying insurance rises to 81
percent, the IRS said.
The government had estimated in January that from 3 million to 6 million households would have to pay a penalty: 1 percent of their annual income or $95 per adult in 2014, whichever is greater.
Final
figures for the tax year aren't available yet. The IRS has so far
processed about 135 million of the estimated 150 million returns
expected. IRS Commissioner John Koskinen said the agency was reporting
preliminary figures because it has received "numerous requests" from
members of Congress.
In addition to penalty totals, the IRS
reported Tuesday on tax subsidies the health law provided for people who
were buying coverage through the state or federal online exchanges and
who qualified based on income. People had a choice of filing for credits
in advance — money the government paid to their insurers — or when
filing tax returns.
About 2.7 million taxpayers claimed
approximately $9 billion in subsidies, reporting an average subsidy of
$3,400. About 40 percent claimed less than $2,000, 40 percent claimed
$2,000 to $5,000, and 20 percent claimed $5,000 or more.
Among
taxpayers who claimed a subsidy, about 1.6 million, or half of taxpayers
who claimed or received a subsidy, had to pay money back to the
government because their actual income was higher than projected when
they applied for the subsidy. The average amount repaid was about $800.
When
looking at the individual mandate, the report said the vast majority of
people automatically satisfied the individual mandate because they were
insured last year. Another 12 million had exemptions, including people
whose incomes were too low and Native Americans.
In all, the IRS
said it has collected $1.5 billion from the individual mandate penalty
included in the health law. About 40 percent of taxpayers who paid a
penalty paid less than $100.
About 300,000 taxpayers who made an
individual mandate penalty payment should have claimed an exemption but
did not, the government said. The agency is sending letters to these
taxpayers telling them they generally have three years to file an
amended tax return.
More than 5 million taxpayers did not check
the box on their tax form saying had coverage, claim a health care
coverage exemption, or pay a penalty. "We are analyzing these cases to
determine their status," the government said.
source
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment