Young adults can stay on parents’ health care plans

Young Adults and the Affordable Care Act: Protecting Young Adults and Eliminating Burdens on Families and Businesses

The Affordable Care Act allows young adults to stay on their parents’ health care plan until age 26. Before the President signed this landmark Act into law, many health plans and issuers could and did in fact remove young adults from their parents’ policies because of their age, leaving many college graduates and others with no insurance. This helps to explain problems like:

Providing Relief for Young Adults

The Affordable Care Act requires plans and issuers that offer coverage to children on their parents’ plan to make the coverage available until the adult child reaches the age of 26. Many parents and their children who worried about losing health insurance after the children moved away from home or graduated from college no longer need to worry.

The Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and Treasury have issued regulations implementing the Affordable Care Act by expanding dependent coverage for adult children up to age 26. Key elements include:

Access to Insurance: What Young Adults and Parents Need to Do:

New Tax Benefits for Adult Child Coverage

The new regulation complements guidance issued by the Treasury Department on April 27, 2010, on the tax benefits provided for such coverage through the Affordable Care Act. Under a new tax provision in the Affordable Care Act and the Treasury guidance, the value of any employer-provided health coverage for an employee’s child is excluded from the employee’s income through the end of the taxable year in which the child turns 26. This tax benefit applies regardless of whether the plan is required by law to extend health care coverage to the adult child or the plan voluntarily extends the coverage.

Key elements include:

Companies Responding To Secretary Sebelius’ Call For Early Implementation:

Early implementation by the companies listed below will avoid gaps in coverage for new college graduates and other young adults and save on insurance company administrative costs of dis-enrolling and re-enrolling them between May 2010 and the start of the plan or policy year beginning on or after September 23, 2010. Early enrollment will also enable young, overwhelmingly healthy people who will not engender large insurance costs to stay in the insurance pool. The following companies have agreed to implement this program before the September 23, 2010 deadline:

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Delaware

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida

Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Hawaii (HMSA)

Blue Shield of California

Blue Cross of Idaho Health Service

Regence Blue Shield of Idaho

Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa

Health Care Service Corporation

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas

Blue Cross Blue Shield Association

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana

WellPoint, Inc.

CareFirst BlueCross and BlueShield

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Massachusetts

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Michigan

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Montana

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska

Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Mississippi

Horizon Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Jersey, Inc.

HealthNow New York, Inc.

The Regence Group

Excellus Blue Cross and Blue Shield

Capital BlueCross

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina

Independence Blue Cross

BlueCross BlueShield of North Dakota

Highmark, Inc.

Blue Cross of Northeastern Pennsylvania

BlueCross and BlueShield of Tennessee

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont

Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island

Premera Blue Cross

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of South Carolina

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Wyoming

Kaiser Permanente

Cigna

Aetna

United

WellPoint

Humana

Capital District Physicians’ Health Plan (CDPHP), Albany, New York

Capital Health Plan, Tallahassee, Florida

Care Oregon, Portland, Oregon

Emblem Health, New York, New York

Fallon Community Health Plan, Worcester, Massachusetts

Geisinger Health Plan, Danville, Pennsylvania

Group Health, Seattle, Washington

Group Health Cooperative Of South Central Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin

Health Partners, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Independent Health, Buffalo, New York

Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Oakland, California

Martin’s Point Health Care, Portland, Maine

New West Health Services, Helena, Mt

The Permanente Federation, Oakland, California

Priority Health, Grand Rapids, Michigan

Scott & White Health Plan, Temple, Texas

Security Health Plan, Marshfield, Wisconsin

Tufts Health Plan, Waltham, Massachusetts

UCARE, Minneapolis, Minnesota

UPMC Health Plan, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Frequently asked questions about the Affordable Care Act