Sent:
Tuesday, September 07, 2010 9:58 AM
Subject: IRS Releases Form to Help Small
Businesses
The following information is for small businesses and
tax exempt organizations.
The Internal Revenue Service today
released a draft version of the form that small
businesses and tax-exempt organizations will use to
calculate the small business health care tax credit when
they file income tax returns next year. The IRS also
announced how eligible tax-exempt organizations –– which
do not generally file income tax returns –– will claim
the credit during the 2011 filing season.
The IRS has posted a
draft of Form 8941 on IRS.gov. Both small businesses
and tax-exempt organizations will use the form to
calculate the credit. A small business will then include
the amount of the credit as part of the general business
credit on its income tax return.
Tax-exempt organizations will instead claim the small
business health care tax credit on a revised Form 990-T.
The Form 990-T is currently used by tax-exempt
organizations to report and pay the tax on unrelated
business income. Form 990-T will be revised for the 2011
filing season to enable eligible tax-exempt
organizations –– even those that owe no tax on unrelated
business income –– also to claim the small business
health care tax credit.
The final version of Form 8941 and its instructions
will be available later this year.
The small business health care tax credit was
included in the Affordable Care Act signed by the
President in March and is effective this year. The
credit is designed to encourage small employers to offer
health insurance coverage for the first time or maintain
coverage they already have.
In 2010, the credit is generally available to small
employers that contribute an amount equivalent to at
least half the cost of single coverage towards buying
health insurance for their employees. The credit is
specifically targeted to help small businesses and
tax-exempt organizations that primarily employ moderate-
and lower-income workers.
For tax years 2010 to 2013, the maximum credit is 35
percent of premiums paid by eligible small business
employers and 25 percent of premiums paid by eligible
employers that are tax-exempt organizations. Beginning
in 2014, the maximum tax credit will go up to 50 percent
of premiums paid by eligible small business employers
and 35 percent of premiums paid by eligible, tax-exempt
organizations for two years. The maximum credit goes to
smaller employers those with 10 or fewer full-time
equivalent (FTE) employees paying annual average wages
of $25,000 or less.
The credit is completely phased out for employers
that have 25 FTEs or more or that pay average wages of
$50,000 per year or more. Because the eligibility rules
are based in part on the number of FTEs, and not simply
the number of employees, businesses that use part-time
help may qualify even if they employ more than 25
individuals.
More
information about the credit, including
a step-by-step guide and
answers to frequently asked questions, is available
on the
Affordable Care Act page on the IRS website.
Internal Revenue Service
Governmental Liaison for California & Nevada