Small business owners may be wondering if a self administered QSEHRA is possible, or a good idea. The answer? Not really. Setting up your own QSEHRA without an HRA administrator can be confusing and time-consuming, from the compliance requirements to the administrative burden. YOu, as the business owner, are responsible for all QSEHRA reimbursements and requirements. It’s important to stay compliant or the IRS could deem your HRA to be invalid and all of your reimbursements to be taxable (for both you and your employees). Here are a few more reasons why experts don't recommend it.
This is a great question (one we get a lot, actually). The short answer is no, but before we get into the nitty gritty, let's go over a few high level details.
The Qualified Small Employer HRA, sometimes called a Small Business HRA or a defined contribution model or 401(K) style benefits, is a type of standalone HRA that is designed to help small business owners afford health insurance for their teams—often a major challenge due to rising premiums and participation rates.
As a health reimbursement arrangement, the QSEHRA allows employers (with 50 employees or less) to set aside a fixed amount of money each month that employees can use to purchase individual health insurance or use on medical expenses, tax-free. This means employers get to offer small business health insurance benefits in a tax-efficient manner without the hassle or headache of administering a traditional group plan and employees can choose the plan they want.
The general idea is this: employers simply reimburse employees when a health expense occurs. There is no pre-funding of accounts. If employees don't submit receipts for reimbursement or do not need medical care, the leftover funds stay in the employer's pocket.
Let's go over if your business qualified for QSEHRA before jumping into the details.
To qualify for a Qualified Small Employer Health Reimbursement Arrangement (QSEHRA), the employer must have fewer than 50 full-time employees, making it suitable for small businesses. It also is required to not offer a group plan.
For an employee to be eligible, they'll (99% of the time) need to be a W-2. They also have to purchase a health plan that meets minimum essential coverage to participate.
There are many things a business owner would need to take care of in order to self-administer a QSEHRA. Here are a few of them.
The QSEHRA employee notice is an important legal requirement to ensure compliance with IRS regulations and to keep employees informed about the benefits they can access. Employers must provide this notice to all eligible employees before the QSEHRA plan year begins, and it is crucial to do so in a timely and accurate manner. Failure to provide the required notice can result in penalties.
A business owner would need to design their QSEHRA. That means coming up with an amount to reimburse all employees. It also means deciding whether or not to reimburse medical expenses in addition to premiums, or scaling reimbursement rates by age and family size.
To reimburse your employees, they must cover an expense out of pocket and submit documentation. An employer then has to evaluate the compliance of the expense and add the expense to an employee's paycheck or find another means of reimbursing them.
It is essential to have a secure and reliable method for storing your employees' medical receipts and protecting their personal health information (PHI) for the required 7-year period.
The IRS requires employers to report QSEHRA benefits available to employees on Form W-2. This amount must be reported on every employee's IRS Form W-2 whether or not the employee receives reimbursement from the QSEHRA; reporting will not have an effect on the employee's taxable income either way.
Self-administering a QSEHRA is not a good idea. Here's why.
For starters, given the nature of a small business HRA and the private health information it involves when it comes to filing reimbursements for qualified medical expenses, privacy is a big issue, even before we get into the whole HIPAA aspect of it (more on that below). As an employer, you would have access to personal information about your employees' health. This could be potentially uncomfortable for everyone involved.
It's a hassle for employers to keep up with medical receipts and time-consuming to maintain them in a secure way, not to mention the necessary paperwork that comes with it. The IRS requires businesses to keep records up to 7 years. That means you’ll need a secure way to keep your employees’ medical receipts and their PHI secure and safe for up to 7 years. The organizational method of receipts in a shoebox isn't going to cut it.
This is the big one. Because small business HRAs are designed for companies with less than 50 employees, it doesn’t technically fall within many of the federal laws that affect health plans built for larger corporations. But that doesn't mean you are off the hook when it comes to HIPAA (the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996). Some parts of HIPAA still apply to small business HRAs. Why? Because all health plans, including those reimbursed through a QSEHRA, must observe the HIPAA Privacy Rule, regardless of the company's size. This rule is designed to protect patients' PHI.
→ Dive in to more details on QSEHRA Compliance here.
Self-administering a QSEHRA comes with it's challenges, as we mentioned above. Here are a few other things to keep in mind.
PHI (Protected Health Information) comes in all sorts of communication forms, including hard documentation, emails and telephone calls. Here are a few "real life" examples that could come into play when an employee submits verification for qualifying medical expenses to an employer.
Now that is a lot to keep track of.
Here are a few rules to remain compliant with HIPAA:
From the less-serious "Reasonable Cause" to the more-serious "Willful Neglect," these civil penalties can range from $100 to $50,000 per incident with no jail time to more serious offenses resulting in up to $250,000 in fines and 10 years in prison, especially if information was taken under false pretenses or disclosed on purpose.
If that wasn't enough of a deterrent, state laws could impose additional penalties for the same offenses. Also, even if you didn't intend for noncompliance to occur or it was an accident, you are still liable. There is no safe haven here.
With your employees' privacy and costly violations on the line, why chance it? Let Take Command's QSEHRA administration tool do all the heavy lifting for you.
Our platform drafts plan documents with HIPAA compliant language and instant updates, and takes care of QSEHRA administration requirements like reviewing documents that contain protected health information. We'll also handle all the accounting and legal legwork, take care of onboarding each of your employees, and make tax time easy and painless. You'll never have to hassle with receipts or worry about setting up a health plan again.
Plus, it's only $15 per month per employee. If you've got more questions, contact us or check out the administration chapter in our handy QSEHRA guide.