How Does Form 1095-a Affect My Taxes? | Form 1095-A | Meru Accounting
Click here to watch full video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLG1vNpSFCk
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Norway

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Belarus
seen from China

seen from Poland
seen from China
seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from United States
How Does Form 1095-a Affect My Taxes? | Form 1095-A | Meru Accounting
Click here to watch full video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLG1vNpSFCk

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Form 1095-C Codes are used to report the employees' health coverage information on Line 14 & 16. Check our 1095-C Code cheatsheet for Section 4980h safe harbor codes.
On Line 14 and 16, Form 1095-C codes are utilised to report the employees' health coverage information. Section 4980h safe harbour codes can be found on our 1095-C Code cheatsheet.
1095 clarity: Dependents’ SSNs are required from self-insured employers
By Ernie Redfern
| ACA Compliance Director, Integrity Data
Businesses that are self-insured must report a Social Security Number for every covered dependent they identify under Part III of IRS Form 1095-C. The clarity that a SSN is required – and that a birth date is not an optional equivalent – came in a tucked-away paragraph of a recent IRS notice.
The notice
Notice 2015-68, published October 13, 2015, states that a reporting entity must act “in a responsible manner in soliciting a TIN.” (TIN stands for Taxpayer Identification Number, a term that refers to Social Security Numbers in addition to tax-processing numbers for individuals who do not qualify for a SSN.)
According to this notice, which was released to provide additional ACA reporting guidance for businesses that are self-insured, failure to provide this information – a SSN – can be lead to a penalty for reporting incomplete information.
The misconception
Confusion has swirled among businesses that are self-insured about what identifying information they must report on a 1095-C for covered dependents:
Do you report the dependent’s birth date?
Do you report the dependent’s Social Security Number?
Isn’t it all right to use the dependent’s birth date in place of their SSN?
Misconception on this point came from initial ACA guidance by the IRS that either a SSN or a birth date could be used when filling out Part III of Form 1095-C.
The details
The penalty that Notice 2015-68 refers to for incomplete information may be waived only “if the failure is due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect; that is, if a reporting entity demonstrates that it acted in a responsible manner and that the failure is due to significant mitigating factors or events beyond the reporting entity’s control.”
A “responsible manner” of obtaining an individual’s SSN is defined as:
Soliciting the information when the coverage begins
A first annual solicitation by December 31 of the year the coverage began (or January 31 if the account is opened in December)
A second annual solicitation by December 31 of the following year
The call to action
If you are an employer that offers self-insured health coverage, please note – and advise colleagues – that dependents’ SSNs are required for 1095 reporting:
You will need to get and report SSNs for the covered dependents of your employees.
Just reporting birth dates would be considered reporting of incomplete information.