Current:Home > ContactA smart move on tax day: Sign up for health insurance using your state's tax forms -StockPrime
A smart move on tax day: Sign up for health insurance using your state's tax forms
View
Date:2025-04-17 02:29:36
Many of her clients don't believe it when Maryland-based tax preparer Diana Avellaneda tells them they might qualify for low-cost health coverage. Or they think she's trying to sell them something. But in reality, she's helping her customers take advantage of an underused feature of her state's tax forms: A way to get financial assistance for health insurance.
Avellaneda says she just wants people to avoid the financial risk of a medical emergency: "I have health insurance right now, and I feel very, very peaceful. So I want my community to know that."
The process is simple: By checking a box, taxpayers trigger what's called a qualifying event that enables them to sign up for insurance outside the traditional open enrollment period and access subsidies that can bring the cost of that insurance down, if their income is low enough. It also allows Maryland's comptroller to share a person's income information with the state's insurance exchange, created by the Affordable Care Act.
Then people receive a letter giving an estimate of the kind of financial assistance they qualify for, be that subsidies on an exchange-based plan, Medicaid or, for their child, CHIP. A health care navigator may also call taxpayers offering them enrollment assistance.
Avellaneda says most of her clients who apply end up qualifying for subsidized insurance – many are surprised because they had assumed financial assistance is only available to those with extremely low incomes. In fact, Avellaneda thought this as well until she did her own taxes a couple years ago.
"I was one of the persons that thought that I couldn't qualify because of my income," said Avellaneda, with a chuckle.
An outreach model that's spreading
A growing number of states – including Colorado, New Mexico and Massachusetts – are using tax forms to point people toward the lower-cost coverage available through state insurance marketplaces; by next year, it will be at least ten, including Illinois, Maine, California and New Jersey.
"We all file taxes, right? We all know we're filling out a bazillion forms. So what's one more?" said Antoinette Kraus, executive director of the Pennsylvania Health Access Network, who advocated for Pennsylvania to create a program that's based on Maryland's, which it did last year.
Often, efforts to enroll people in health insurance are scattershot because the datasets of uninsured people are incomplete; for example outreach workers might be trying to reach out to people who have submitted unfinished Medicaid applications to try and sign them up for coverage. But everyone has to pay taxes, and that existing infrastructure helps states connect the dots and find people who are open to signing up for insurance but haven't yet.
"It's hard to imagine more targeted outreach than this. I think that's one reason it's become popular," said Rachel Schwab, who researches the impact of state and federal policy on private insurance quality and access at Georgetown University.
Health insurance changes
The rise of these initiatives, known as easy enrollment, is happening at a time of incredible churn for health insurance. The end of COVID-19 era policies are forcing people to reenroll in Medicaid or find new insurance if they make too much money. At the same time, marketplace subsidies that were created in response to the pandemic have been extended through the end of 2025, via the Inflation Reduction Act.
So having a simple way to connect people to health care coverage and make the most of these federal dollars is a good idea, says Coleman Drake, a health policy researcher at the University of Pittsburgh. But he cautions, these initiatives won't get everyone covered.
Data bears this out: Only about 10,000 Marylanders have gotten insurance this way since 2020, less than 3% of that state's uninsured population. The number in Pennsylvania is estimated to be small too. Still, it's a step in the right direction.
"Uninsurance in general, is extremely costly to society," said Drake. "Whatever we can do here to make signing up for health insurance easy, I think, is an advantage."
There is lower-cost insurance available for consumers, and, in some states, getting this coverage is now simpler than many realize.
This story comes from a partnership with WESA, NPR and KHN. The web version was edited by Carmel Wroth of NPR, and the broadcast version was edited by Will Stone of NPR and Taunya English of KHN.
veryGood! (15745)
Related
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Minnesota might be on the verge of a normal legislative session after a momentous 2023
- Words on mysterious scroll buried by Mount Vesuvius eruption deciphered for first time after 2,000 years
- 2 more women accuse Jonathan Majors of physical, emotional abuse in new report
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Queen Camilla says King Charles III is doing 'extremely well under the circumstances'
- Usher Drops New Album Ahead of Super Bowl 2024 Halftime Performance
- Mardi Gras 2024: What to know as Carnival season nears its rollicking end in New Orleans
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- See Kylie Jenner Debut Short Bob Hair Transformation in Topless Selfie
Ranking
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Kansas Wesleyan University cancels classes, events after professor dies in her office
- A stepmother says her husband killed his 5-year-old and hid her body. His lawyers say she’s lying
- Falcons owner: Bill Belichick didn't ask for full control of team, wasn't offered job
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Ex-TV news reporter is running as a Republican for Bob Menendez’s Senate seat in New Jersey
- At Texas border rally, fresh signs the Jan. 6 prosecutions left some participants unbowed
- How murdered Hollywood therapist Amie Harwick testified at her alleged killer's trial
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Costco, Trader Joe's and Walmart products made with cheese linked to deadly listeria outbreak
Nurse acquitted of involuntary manslaughter in 2019 death of a 24-year-old California jail inmate
200-foot radio station tower stolen without a trace in Alabama, silencing small town’s voice
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Rihanna, Adele, Ryan Reynolds and More Celebs Who Were Born in the Year of the Dragon
Vanessa Bryant Attends Kobe Bryant Statue Unveiling With Daughters Natalia, Bianka and Capri
The wife of a famed Tennessee sheriff died in a 1967 unsolved shooting. Agents just exhumed her body