IRS Issues Interim Guidance on Informational Reporting of Employer-Sponsored
Health Coverage
Reporting is Voluntary for All Employers for 2011 and Small Employers for
2012
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today issued interim guidance to
employers on informational reporting on each employee's annual Form W-2 of the
cost of the health insurance coverage they sponsor for employees. The IRS is
also requesting comments on this interim guidance. The IRS emphasized that this
new reporting to employees is for their information only, to inform them of the
cost of their health coverage, and does not cause excludable employer-provided
health coverage to become taxable; employer-provided health coverage continues
to be excludable from an employee's income, and is not taxable. The Affordable
Care Act provides that employers are required to report the cost of
employer-provided health care coverage on the Form W-2. Notice 2010-69, issued
last fall, made this requirement optional for all employers for the 2011 Forms
W-2 (generally furnished to employees in January 2012). In today's guidance, the
IRS provided further relief for smaller employers (those filing fewer than 250
W-2 forms) by making this requirement optional for them at least for 2012 (i.e.,
for 2012 Forms W-2 that generally would be furnished to employees in January
2013) and continuing this optional treatment for smaller employers until further
guidance is issued. Using a question-and-answer format, Notice 2011-28 also
provides guidance for employers that are subject to this requirement for the
2012 Forms W-2 and those that choose to voluntarily comply with it for either
2011 or 2012. The notice includes information on how to report, what coverage to
include and how to determine the cost of the coverage. The 2011 Form W-2, prior
IRS Notice 2010-69 deferring the reporting requirement for 2011, and Notice
2011-28 containing the new guidance are available on IRS.gov.
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