Who is the Employer for ACA?

Posted by BAS - 14 December, 2017

header-picture

The Affordable Care Act requires an applicable large employer to offer it’s full-time employees affordable health coverage that provides minimum value.

An employer for the purposes of the Affordable Care Act is an entity that employs for hire one or more employees. An employer includes a government employer, a corporation, a church employer, a predecessor employer and a successor employer.

Since the mandate to offer coverage applies to applicable large employers, an organization must determine if it is an ALE and subject to the ACA. An ALE is an employer that employed 50 or more employees on business days during the year. An employer that is part of a controlled group is considered a single employer when counting employees for ACA purposes. That means all employees of all employers within the controlled group are taken into account in determining if any member of the controlled group is an ALE.

Large employers should be gearing up for their ACA reporting compliance obligations. For help with ACA compliance, contact your account manager or solutions@BASusa.com.

Topics: Health Care Reform (ACA)


Recent Posts

Top 5 Questions to Ask Ally—Your New AI Benefits Assistant

read more

How to Use Ally and the BAS Help Center for Easy Benefits Support

read more

Introducing Ally: BAS Launches AI-Powered Help Center for Smarter Benefits Support

read more