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Notice 2021-31
Claiming the COBRA Premium Assistance Credit - Q&A 71-86
Claiming the COBRA Premium Assistance Credit - Q&A 71-86

Questions & Answers from #71-86

Updated over a week ago

Claiming the COBRA Premium Assistance Credit

Q-71. Who is eligible for the premium assistance credit under § 6432(a) of the Code?

A-71. Under § 6432(a) of the Code, the premium payee for continuation coverage under § 9501(a)(1) of the ARP is eligible for the credit.

Q-72. Who is the premium payee under § 9501(a)(1) of the ARP?

A-72. The premium payee is: (1) The multiemployer plan, in the case of a group health plan that is a multiemployer plan (as defined in § 3(37) of ERISA); (2) The common law employer maintaining the plan, in the case of a group health plan, other than a multiemployer plan, that is (a) subject to Federal COBRA, or (b) under which some or all of the coverage is not provided by insurance (that is, a plan that is self-funded, in whole or in part); (3) The insurer providing the coverage, in the case of any other group health plan not described in (1) or (2) (generally, fully insured coverage subject to State continuation coverage requirements).

Q-73. May a governmental entity be a premium payee, and therefore eligible for the premium assistance credit?

A-73. Yes. A premium payee may include the government of any State or political subdivision thereof, any Indian tribal government (as defined in § 139E(c)(1)), any agency or instrumentality of any of the foregoing, and any agency or instrumentality of the Government of the United States that is described in § 501(c)(1) and exempt from taxation under § 501(a).

Q-74. When does the premium payee become entitled to the premium assistance credit?

A-74. As of the date on which the premium payee receives the potential Assistance Eligible Individual’s election of COBRA continuation coverage, the premium payee is entitled to the credit for premiums not paid by an Assistance Eligible Individual by reason of § 9501(a)(1) for any periods of coverage that began before that date.8 The premium payee is entitled to the credit for the premiums not paid by an Assistance Eligible Individual for each subsequent period of coverage as of the beginning of each period of coverage that the individual does not pay the premiums by reason of § 9501(a)(1) in accordance with the individual’s election, without regard to when the premium payee could have required the payment of any premium. (See Q&A-86 for information regarding entitlement to the credit if an Assistance Eligible Individual erroneously pays the premium.)

Example: A premium payee’s COBRA period of coverage is a calendar month with COBRA premium payments due on the tenth day of each calendar month. The premium payee pays its employees semi-monthly, with payroll periods ending on the fifteenth of the month and the last day of the month. On June 17, 2021, the premium payee receives a COBRA election from a potential Assistance Eligible Individual who elects COBRA continuation coverage as of April 1, 2021. The premium payee is entitled to a credit as of June 17, 2021, for the premiums not paid by the Assistance Eligible Individual for the periods of coverage April 1, 2021, through April 30, 2021, May 1, 2021, through May 31, 2021, and June 1, 2021, through June 30, 2021. Assuming the Assistance Eligible Individual does not notify the premium payee that the Assistance Eligible Individual is no longer eligible for COBRA premium assistance (and the premium payee does not otherwise become aware that the Assistance Eligible Individual is ineligible), the premium payee becomes entitled to the credit as of July 1, 2021, for the premiums not paid by the Assistance Eligible Individual for the period of coverage of July 1, 2021, through July 31, 2021. (Assuming the facts remain as stated, the premium payee would be entitled to the credit on (i) August 1, 2021, for the period of coverage of August 1, 2021, through August 31, 2021, and (ii) September 1, 2021, for the period of coverage of September 1, 2021, through September 30, 2021.)

Q-75. How does a premium payee claim the premium assistance credit?

A-75. A premium payee claims the credit by reporting the credit (both the nonrefundable and refundable portions of the credit, as applicable) and the number of individuals receiving COBRA premium assistance on the designated lines of its federal employment tax return(s), usually Form 941, Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return.

In anticipation of receiving the credit to which it is entitled, the premium payee may (1) reduce the deposits of federal employment taxes, including withheld taxes, that it would otherwise be required to deposit, up to the amount of the anticipated credit, and (2) request an advance of the amount of the anticipated credit that exceeds the federal employment tax deposits available for reduction by filing Form 7200, Advance Payment of Employer Credits Due to COVID-19. See Notice 2021-24 for more information regarding the reduction in deposits for the credit and other employment tax credits.

Example 1: Under the facts in the Example in Q&A-74, the premium payee should report the credit for April through June 2021 on the Form 941 for the second quarter of 2021.

Example 2: Same facts as in the Example in Q&A-74, except that the premium payee receives a COBRA election from an Assistance Eligible Individual on July 17, 2021, and the individual elects COBRA continuation coverage as of June 1, 2021. The premium payee becomes entitled to a corresponding credit as of July 17, 2021, for the premiums not paid by the Assistance Eligible Individual for the periods of coverage of (1) June 1 through June 30, 2021, and (2) July 1 through July 31, 2021. The premium payee should report the total credit on the Form 941 for the third quarter of 2021, including the credit for the periods of coverage from June 1, 2021 through June 30, 2021.

Q-76. When may a premium payee reduce its deposits of federal employment taxes and, if applicable, file Form 7200 to request an advance of the anticipated premium assistance credit that exceeds the federal employment tax deposits available for reduction for a quarter?

A-76. A premium payee may reduce its deposits of federal employment taxes in anticipation of the credit to which the premium payee has become entitled with regard to a period of coverage as of the date the premium payee is entitled to the credit as described in Q&A-74. If the anticipated credit exceeds the federal employment tax deposits available for reduction, the premium payee may file Form 7200 to request an advance payment of the credit. The Form 7200 may be filed after the end of the payroll period in which the premium payee became entitled to the credit.

Deposits may not be reduced, and advances may not be requested, for a credit for a period of coverage that has not begun. Form 7200 must be filed before the earlier of (1) the day the employment tax return for the quarter in which the premium payee is entitled to the credit is filed, or (2) the last day of the month following that quarter. The premium payee entitled to the credit should also report any advance payments received in anticipation of the credit for the quarter on the employment tax return.

Example: Same facts as in the Example in Q&A-74. The premium payee may reduce its federal employment tax deposits as of June 17, 2021, the date the Assistance Eligible Individual elected COBRA continuation coverage, in anticipation of the credit to which the premium payee has become entitled. However, if the credit exceeds the available reduction in deposits, the premium payee may file Form 7200 to request an advance for the remaining credit after the end of the semi-monthly payroll period in which the premium payee became entitled to the credit. Thus, because the Assistance Eligible Individual elected COBRA continuation coverage on June 17, 2021, the premium payee may seek an advance beginning on July 1, 2021, the day after the end of the payroll period of June 16 through June 30, 2021.

Assuming the Assistance Eligible Individual did not notify the premium payee that the Assistance Eligible Individual is no longer eligible for COBRA continuation coverage (and the premium payee did not otherwise become aware of the Assistance Eligible Individual’s ineligibility), the premium payee becomes entitled to an additional credit as of July 1, 2021, for the premiums not paid by the Assistance Eligible Individual for the period of coverage of July 1 through July 30, 2021. The premium payee may reduce its federal employment deposits as of July 1, 2021, in anticipation of the credit to which the premium payee has become entitled. If the anticipated credit exceeds the federal employment tax deposits available for reduction, the premium payee may file Form 7200 to request an advance for the remaining credit. However, because the semimonthly payroll period in which the premium payee becomes entitled to the credit does not end until July 15, the premium payee may not seek an advance for the credit until July 16, 2021, even though it may reduce deposits on July 1, 2021, the day the premium payee is entitled to the credit.

Q-77. How is the premium assistance credit claimed if the premium payee does not have any employment tax liability, for example, in the case of a multiemployer plan with no employees?

A-77. If the premium payee entitled to claim the credit does not have any employment tax liability, the premium payee should claim the credit on the Form 941 for the quarter in which the premium payee becomes entitled to the credit. The premium payee entitled to the credit should also report any advance payments received in anticipation of the credit on the same Form 941. The premium payee should enter zero on all remaining non-applicable lines so that the overpayment amount on the Form 941 is the amount of the credit reduced by any advance payment received.

Q-78. If an Assistance Eligible Individual receiving COBRA premium assistance fails to provide notice of the individual’s eligibility for coverage under any other disqualifying group health plan or Medicare and continues receiving COBRA premium assistance, is the premium payee required to refund to the IRS the premium assistance credit arising from the period after the individual’s eligibility for COBRA premium assistance ended due to eligibility for the other coverage?

A-78. No. If an Assistance Eligible Individual fails to provide notice that the individual is no longer eligible for the COBRA premium assistance due to eligibility for other disqualifying group health plan coverage or Medicare, the premium payee is still entitled to the credit received for that period of ineligibility, unless the premium payee knew of the individual’s eligibility for the other coverage. If the premium payee learns that the individual is eligible for other coverage (and thus of the individual’s ineligibility for COBRA premium assistance), the premium payee is not entitled to the credit from that point forward.

Q-79. Is the premium assistance credit included in gross income?

A-79. Yes. Under § 6432(e), the gross income of any premium payee allowed a credit is increased by the amount of the credit for the taxable year which includes the last day of any quarter with respect to which the credit is allowed.

Q-80. May a premium payee claim the premium assistance credit with respect to amounts that are taken into account as qualified wages under § 2301 of the CARES Act or § 3134 of the Code, or as qualified health plan expenses under §§ 7001(d) or 7003(d) of the FFCRA or §§ 3131 or 3132 of the Code?

A-80. No. Under § 6432(e), a premium payee may not claim a double benefit with respect to these amounts.

Q-81. May a premium payee that uses a third-party payer to report and pay employment taxes to the IRS receive the premium assistance credit?

A-81. Yes. The premium payee is entitled to the credit, regardless of whether it uses a third-party payer (such as a reporting agent, payroll service provider, professional employer organization (PEO), certified professional employer organization (CPEO), or § 3504 agent) to report and pay its federal employment taxes. Thus, unless the third-party payer is treated as the premium payee for purposes of the credit in accordance with Q&A-82, the third-party payer is not entitled to the credit, regardless of whether the third party is considered an “employer” for other purposes of the Code. However, the third-party payer may report the credit on behalf of a client that is the premium payee with respect to any federal employment taxes it reports and pays on the premium payee’s behalf. Different rules apply depending on the type of third-party payer the premium payee uses, as follows.

If a premium payee uses a reporting agent to file its federal employment tax returns, the reporting agent will need to reflect the credit on the federal employment tax returns it files on behalf of the premium payee. If a premium payee uses a CPEO or a § 3504 agent that received its designation as an agent by submitting Form 2678, Employer/Payer Appointment of Agent, to report its federal employment taxes on an aggregate Form 941, the CPEO or § 3504 agent will report the credit on its aggregate Form 941 and Schedule R, Allocation Schedule for Aggregate Form 941 Filers.

If a premium payee uses a non-certified PEO or other third-party payer (other than a CPEO or § 3504 agent that submitted Form 2678) that reports and pays the premium payee’s federal employment taxes under the third-party payer’s Employer Identification Number (EIN), the PEO or other third-party payer will need to report the credit on an aggregate Form 941 and separately report the credit allocable to the premium payees for which it is filing the aggregate Form 941 on an accompanying Schedule R.

A premium payee that uses a third-party payer to report and pay employment taxes to the IRS must nonetheless submit its own Form 7200 to request any advance payment of the credit. The premium payee will need to provide a copy of the Form 7200 to the CPEO, § 3504 agent, or other third-party payer that reports and pays the premium payee’s federal employment taxes under the third-party payer’s EIN, so the third-party payer can properly report the credit on the employment tax return.

Q-82. May a third-party payer (such as a PEO, CPEO, or § 3504 agent) be treated as a premium payee for purposes of claiming the premium assistance credit?

A-82. Yes, but only under certain circumstances. A third-party payer is treated as the premium payee for purposes of the credit if the third-party payer: (i) maintains the group health plan, (ii) is considered the sponsor of the group health plan and is subject to the applicable DOL COBRA guidance, including providing the COBRA election notices to qualified beneficiaries , and (iii) would have received the COBRA premium payments directly from the Assistance Eligible Individuals were it not for the COBRA premium assistance (the TPP Plan Administrator). In this case, the third-party payer’s client is not treated as a premium payee and is, therefore, not eligible for the credit. However, in circumstances in which a third-party payer files an aggregate employment tax return to report and pay employment taxes for individuals who are common law employees of the third-party payer’s clients, and the conditions set forth in (i) through (iii) above are not satisfied, the third-party payer is not treated as the premium payee and may claim the credit only on behalf of its clients (See Q&A-81).

As the premium payee, the TPP Plan Administrator claims the credit on the applicable lines on Form 941 and, if the TPP Plan Administrator otherwise has to complete Schedule R, the TPP Plan Administrator would report the credit that it is claiming in that capacity on line 8 of the Schedule R, rather than separately with respect to each client for which it was acting as TPP Plan Administrator. (If the third-party payer was not a TPP Plan Administrator for all of its clients, the third-party payer may also claim the credit on behalf of its clients that are premium payees, but would be required to separately report the credit with respect to each of those premium payee clients on Schedule R.)

TPP Plan Administrators may reduce the deposits of federal employment taxes relating to their own employees (that is, those employees for whom they are filing as the common law employer rather than as a third-party payer) in anticipation of the credit in accordance with the procedures described in Q&A-76. If the anticipated credit exceeds the available reduction of these deposits, the TPP Plan Administrator may file Form 7200 to request an advance payment of the credit in accordance with the procedures described in Q&A-76.

The TPP Plan Administrator is subject to § 6432(e) and must, correspondingly, increase its gross income for the taxable year that includes the last day of any calendar quarter with respect to which the credit is allowed to the TPP plan administrator. The TPP Plan Administrator is not allowed a credit with respect to any amount that is taken into account (by any person, including a client for whom it files returns as a third-party payer) as qualified wages under § 2301 of the CARES Act or § 3134 of the Code, or as qualified health plan expenses under §§ 7001(d) or 7003(d) of the FFCRA, or §§ 3131 or 3132 of the Code.

Example: A third-party payer maintains and is the sponsor of a group health plan on behalf of all of its clients. Due to the nature of the arrangement with each client, the third-party payer is responsible for providing its clients’ covered employees with the COBRA election notices, and the third-party payer requires individuals enrolled in COBRA continuation coverage to pay the COBRA premiums directly to the third-party payer. Consequently, this third-party payer is treated as a TPP Plan Administrator and is the premium payee that is entitled to any credit.

The plan’s COBRA period of coverage is a calendar month with COBRA premium payments due on the first day of each calendar month. The TPP Plan Administrator pays its own employees that perform services for the TPP Plan Administrator on a semi-monthly basis, with payroll periods ending on the fifteenth of the month and the last day of the month, respectively. On June 17, 2021, the TPP Plan Administrator receives a COBRA election from a client’s potential Assistance Eligible Individual who elects COBRA continuation coverage as of April 1, 2021. The TPP Plan Administrator is entitled to a credit as of June 17, 2021, for the premiums not paid by the Assistance Eligible Individual for the periods of coverage of April 1 through April 30, 2021, May 1 through May 31, 2021, and June 1 through June 31, 2021. Assuming the Assistance Eligible Individual does not notify the TPP Plan Administrator that the individual is no longer eligible for COBRA premium assistance (and the TPP Plan Administrator does not otherwise become aware that the Assistance Eligible Individual is ineligible), the TPP Plan Administrator becomes entitled to the credit as of July 1, 2021, for the premiums not paid by the Assistance Eligible Individual for the period of coverage of July 1 through July 30, 2021. (Assuming the facts continue as stated, the TPP Plan Administrator would be entitled to the credit on (i) August 1, 2021, for the period of coverage of August 1 through August 31, 2021, and (ii) September 1, 2021, for the period of coverage of September 1 through September 30, 2021.)

Q-83. What information must a third-party payer obtain from its clients that are premium payees to claim the premium assistance credit on their behalf?

A-83. If a third-party payer (such as a CPEO, PEO, or other § 3504 agent) is claiming the credit on behalf of a client that is a premium payee, it must obtain from the premium payee any information that would have been necessary for the premium payee to accurately claim the credit on its own behalf.

Q-84. Must a premium payee or a third-party payer claiming the premium assistance credit on behalf of a premium payee maintain records to substantiate eligibility for the credit?

A-84. Yes. Records substantiating the premium payee’s eligibility for the credit must be maintained, either by the third-party payer or the premium payee. A premium payee, or a third-party payer that is claiming the credit on behalf of a client that is a premium payee, must, at the IRS’s request, provide to the IRS records that substantiate eligibility for the credit, including documentation demonstrating that individuals were eligible for the COBRA premium assistance. The premium payee and the third-party payer will be liable for employment taxes that are due as a result of any improper claim of premium assistance credits in accordance with their liability under the Code and applicable regulations for the employment taxes reported on the federal employment tax return filed by the third-party payer on which the credits were claimed.

Q-85. If an Assistance Eligible Individual pays premiums for which the individual should have received COBRA premium assistance under § 9501(a)(1)(A), and the premium payee reimburses the Assistance Eligible Individual for that amount, when is the premium payee entitled to the premium assistance credit with respect to the reimbursement?

A-85. The premium payee is entitled to the credit on the date the premium payee reimburses the Assistance Eligible Individual for the premium amounts for which the individual should have received COBRA premium assistance.

Q-86. If a third party (such as a charity) paid premium charges on behalf of an Assistance Eligible Individual for which the individual should have received COBRA premium assistance, should the premium payee reimburse the third party or the Assistance Eligible Individual for the premium amounts for which the individual should have received COBRA premium assistance?

A-86. The premium payee is responsible for ensuring that reimbursements are made and should reimburse the Assistance Eligible Individual, unless the premium payee is aware that the individual has assigned the right to the reimbursed premium payments to the third party.

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