Individually-Owned Health Insurance
Understanding the tax treatment of health insurance is essential for insurance professionals. The tax implications vary based on who owns the policy, how premiums are paid, and how benefits are received.
Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction
Overview of the Deduction
| Feature | Details |
|---|
| Who qualifies | Self-employed individuals |
| Type of deduction | Above-the-line (reduces AGI) |
| Maximum deduction | Limited to net self-employment income |
| Where claimed | Form 1040, Schedule 1 |
Eligible Coverage
| Covered | Not Covered |
|---|
| Medical insurance | Coverage for non-dependent children over 27 |
| Dental insurance | Coverage when eligible for employer plan |
| Long-term care insurance | Months without net profit |
| Medicare Part B and D | |
| Medicare Advantage | |
Eligibility Requirements
| Requirement | Details |
|---|
| Self-employed status | Schedule C, partnership, S-corp, farming |
| No employer plan access | Cannot be eligible for subsidized employer coverage |
| Not a dependent | Cannot be claimed as dependent on another return |
| Net profit | Must have positive self-employment income |
Key Point: The self-employed health insurance deduction is "above the line," meaning it reduces Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) directly. This is more valuable than itemized deductions because it reduces income before other calculations.
Self-Employed LTC Deduction Limits (2025)
| Age at End of Year | Maximum Deductible Premium |
|---|
| 40 or under | $480 |
| 41-50 | $900 |
| 51-60 | $1,790 |
| 61-70 | $4,770 |
| 71 or older | $5,960 |
Itemized Medical Expense Deduction
How the Deduction Works
| Feature | Details |
|---|
| Schedule | Schedule A (itemized deductions) |
| Threshold | Expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI |
| Applies to | Medical and dental expenses |
| Alternative | Must exceed standard deduction to be useful |
Deductible Medical Expenses
| Category | Examples |
|---|
| Insurance premiums | Health, dental, vision, LTC |
| Out-of-pocket costs | Deductibles, copays, coinsurance |
| Medical care | Doctor visits, hospital stays |
| Prescription drugs | Medications prescribed by doctor |
| Transportation | Mileage to medical appointments |
| Equipment | Wheelchairs, hearing aids, glasses |
Calculation Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|
| AGI | $80,000 |
| 7.5% of AGI | $6,000 |
| Total medical expenses | $9,000 |
| Deductible amount | $3,000 ($9,000 - $6,000) |
Exam Tip: Only medical expenses that EXCEED 7.5% of AGI are deductible. If someone has $5,000 in medical expenses and $80,000 AGI, they can deduct $0 (since $5,000 < $6,000 threshold).
Premium Tax Credits
Tax Treatment of PTCs
| Feature | Details |
|---|
| Type | Refundable tax credit |
| Received in advance | Reduces monthly premium |
| Received at tax time | Increases refund or reduces tax owed |
| Reconciliation | Must be reconciled on tax return |
Tax Form Requirements
| Form | Purpose |
|---|
| Form 1095-A | Health Insurance Marketplace Statement |
| Form 8962 | Premium Tax Credit calculation |
| Form 1040 | Final reconciliation |
Reconciliation Outcomes
| Situation | Tax Impact |
|---|
| Advance PTC < Actual PTC | Additional credit/refund |
| Advance PTC > Actual PTC | Repayment required |
| Advance PTC = Actual PTC | No adjustment |
Tax Treatment of Benefits
Health Insurance Benefit Taxation
| Benefit Source | Tax Treatment |
|---|
| Individual health policy | Benefits received tax-free |
| Medical reimbursements | Tax-free |
| Disability income (individual) | Tax-free (if premiums paid with after-tax dollars) |
Key Point: Health insurance benefits received are generally tax-free regardless of who paid the premiums or how they were paid. This includes reimbursement for medical expenses.