I just opened a new restaurant and was looking at options for health insurance for my employees on healthcare.gov. I am not looking to make employer contributions to the premiums - I am still running at a loss while we build customer base as is. And I have less than 50 employees.
From what've gathered so far, if I sign up on healthcare.gov as an employer and offer coverage and make $0 employer contributions, my employees cannot get premium tax credits?
What this means is if I don't sign up and employees go sign up as individual, they may qualify for premium tax credits, hence lower premiums for them. BUT, if I sign up as an employer and make no employer contributions they will not qualify for tax credits and pay more for insurance?
Am I missing something?
This seems rather odd.
From what've gathered so far, if I sign up on healthcare.gov as an employer and offer coverage and make $0 employer contributions, my employees cannot get premium tax credits?
What this means is if I don't sign up and employees go sign up as individual, they may qualify for premium tax credits, hence lower premiums for them. BUT, if I sign up as an employer and make no employer contributions they will not qualify for tax credits and pay more for insurance?
Am I missing something?
This seems rather odd.