Beancount.io LogoBeancount.io

21 tagged with "Health Insurance"

Track health insurance costs and employee benefits

View all tags

Direct Primary Care Meets Your HSA in 2026: The OBBBA Rule That Makes Monthly Doctor Fees Tax-Free
·mike

Direct Primary Care Meets Your HSA in 2026: The OBBBA Rule That Makes Monthly Doctor Fees Tax-Free

OBBBA Section 71308 and IRS Notice 2026-05 let you pair a Direct Primary Care membership of up to $150/month per adult ($300 family) with an HSA starting January 2026, reclassify all Bronze and Catastrophic marketplace plans as HSA-eligible, and make the telehealth pre-deductible safe harbor permanent. Here is how freelancers, solo S-corp owners, and small employers should stack DPC, marketplace coverage, HSAs, and QSEHRA/ICHRA reimbursements without double-dipping.

healthcare
health-insurance
tax-planning
self-employment
+4
The 2026 ACA Subsidy Cliff Is Back: A Survival Guide for Self-Employed Owners, Freelancers, and Early Retirees
·mike

The 2026 ACA Subsidy Cliff Is Back: A Survival Guide for Self-Employed Owners, Freelancers, and Early Retirees

The enhanced premium tax credits expired January 1, 2026, restoring the 400% FPL cliff. This guide walks self-employed filers, S-corp owners, freelancers, and early retirees through the 2026 applicable percentage schedule, MAGI levers like Solo 401(k), SEP-IRA, HSA, and Section 162(l), and Form 8962 reconciliation strategies to avoid five-figure repayments.

healthcare
health-insurance
tax-planning
tax-credits
+4
Stacking the Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction with the Premium Tax Credit, HSA, and Augusta Rule: A 2026 Owner Compensation Playbook
·mike

Stacking the Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction with the Premium Tax Credit, HSA, and Augusta Rule: A 2026 Owner Compensation Playbook

A field guide to coordinating the Section 162(l) self-employed health insurance deduction with the Premium Tax Credit's circular calculation, HSA contributions, and the Augusta Rule (Section 280A(g)) — including Form 7206 mechanics, S-corp W-2 Box 1 reporting under IRS Notice 2008-1, Medicare Part B and D deductibility, and 2026 contribution limits.

tax-planning
tax-deductions
health-insurance
self-employment
+4
Form 1095-C and Section 4980H: 2026 ACA Employer Penalties and Safe Harbors
·mike

Form 1095-C and Section 4980H: 2026 ACA Employer Penalties and Safe Harbors

For 2026, ALEs face a $3,340 per-employee 4980H(a) penalty and a $5,010 per-employee 4980H(b) penalty, with affordability set at 9.96 percent of pay. This guide covers the FPL, W-2, and rate-of-pay safe harbors, line-by-line Form 1095-C coding, and the errors that drive Letter 226-J assessments.

tax-compliance
payroll
health-insurance
employee-benefits
+4
Form 8889 in 2026: HSA Reporting Without Triggering the 6%, 10%, or 20% Penalty
·mike

Form 8889 in 2026: HSA Reporting Without Triggering the 6%, 10%, or 20% Penalty

A 2026 walkthrough of Form 8889 — HSA contribution limits ($4,400 self-only, $8,750 family), the triple tax advantage, the last-month rule's 13-month testing period, the Medicare six-month retroactive enrollment trap, and the six most common filing mistakes that trigger the 6% excess-contribution excise tax, 10% recapture, or 20% non-qualified-distribution penalty.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
tax-preparation
+4
HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: Stack a Limited-Purpose FSA With Your HSA and Beat the Use-It-or-Lose-It Trap
·mike

HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: Stack a Limited-Purpose FSA With Your HSA and Beat the Use-It-or-Lose-It Trap

2026 rules for HSAs, FSAs, and HRAs — contribution limits, who owns each account, when each one wins, how to stack a Limited-Purpose FSA with an HSA without breaking eligibility, and how employees and employers avoid forfeitures.

healthcare
health-insurance
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: The Practical Playbook for Picking, Stacking, and Not Forfeiting Your Health Dollars
·mike

HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: The Practical Playbook for Picking, Stacking, and Not Forfeiting Your Health Dollars

A 2026 walk-through of HSA, FSA, and HRA rules with the new contribution limits, the limited-purpose FSA stack that adds up to $7,800 of pre-tax room, and how small employers can use ICHRA and QSEHRA to compete with corporate benefits.

healthcare
health-insurance
tax-planning
personal-finance
+4
Section 7702B Long-Term Care Insurance: Deduct Premiums, Trade Old Policies, and Keep the Estate Intact
·mike

Section 7702B Long-Term Care Insurance: Deduct Premiums, Trade Old Policies, and Keep the Estate Intact

Section 7702B defines tax-qualified long-term care insurance — age-indexed premium deductions up to $6,200 per person in 2026, tax-free benefits under the per diem cap, Section 1035 exchanges from old life or annuity contracts, and hybrid life-LTC structures for aging owners and retirees.

insurance
tax-deductions
tax-planning
estate-planning
+4
Section 7702B Qualified Long-Term Care Insurance: Age-Indexed Deductions, Hybrid Life-LTC Policies, and Section 1035 Exchanges
·mike

Section 7702B Qualified Long-Term Care Insurance: Age-Indexed Deductions, Hybrid Life-LTC Policies, and Section 1035 Exchanges

Section 7702B sets the federal rules that decide whether a long-term care policy delivers deductible premiums, tax-free benefits, and tax-free 1035 exchanges. This guide breaks down the 2026 age-indexed deduction limits, the $430 per-diem cap, hybrid life-LTC mechanics, and the planning patterns that move trapped cash value into care coverage without recognizing gain.

tax-planning
insurance
health-insurance
estate-planning
+4
The Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction: How Section 162(l) Beats Itemizing
·mike

The Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction: How Section 162(l) Beats Itemizing

Section 162(l) lets sole proprietors, partners, and more-than-2% S-corp shareholders deduct health, dental, vision, LTC, and Medicare premiums above the line on Schedule 1, line 17 — bypassing the 7.5%-of-AGI floor that gates itemized medical deductions. Form 7206 enforces three limits — earned income, subsidized-coverage months, and PTC coordination — and S-corp owners must include premiums in W-2 Box 1 (not Box 3 or 5) to preserve the deduction.

tax-deductions
self-employment
health-insurance
s-corp
+3
Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction Under Section 162(l): The Above-the-Line Write-Off That Beats Itemizing for Sole Proprietors and S-Corp Owners
·mike

Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction Under Section 162(l): The Above-the-Line Write-Off That Beats Itemizing for Sole Proprietors and S-Corp Owners

Section 162(l) lets sole proprietors, partners, and more-than-2% S-corp shareholders deduct 100% of medical, dental, vision, and long-term care premiums above the line on Schedule 1, Line 17—if they clear the earned-income cap, the spouse-employer rule, and the W-2 reporting choreography on Form 7206.

tax
tax-deductions
self-employment
s-corp
+4
ACA Forms 1094-C and 1095-C: The 2026 Compliance Playbook for Applicable Large Employers
·mike

ACA Forms 1094-C and 1095-C: The 2026 Compliance Playbook for Applicable Large Employers

How Applicable Large Employers file Forms 1094-C and 1095-C for the 2025 reporting year. Covers the March 2 and March 31, 2026 deadlines, the post-2024 furnishing-on-request rule, the 2026 penalty amounts ($3,340 and $5,010 per employee), the new 90-day Letter 226-J response window, and the Line 14/16 coding errors that most often trigger IRS audits.

compliance
tax-compliance
payroll
health-insurance
+4
Showing 1–12 of 21 posts
1 / 2Next