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

FeatureDetails
Who qualifiesSelf-employed individuals
Type of deductionAbove-the-line (reduces AGI)
Maximum deductionLimited to net self-employment income
Where claimedForm 1040, Schedule 1

Eligible Coverage

CoveredNot Covered
Medical insuranceCoverage for non-dependent children over 27
Dental insuranceCoverage when eligible for employer plan
Long-term care insuranceMonths without net profit
Medicare Part B and D
Medicare Advantage

Eligibility Requirements

RequirementDetails
Self-employed statusSchedule C, partnership, S-corp, farming
No employer plan accessCannot be eligible for subsidized employer coverage
Not a dependentCannot be claimed as dependent on another return
Net profitMust 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 YearMaximum 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

FeatureDetails
ScheduleSchedule A (itemized deductions)
ThresholdExpenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI
Applies toMedical and dental expenses
AlternativeMust exceed standard deduction to be useful

Deductible Medical Expenses

CategoryExamples
Insurance premiumsHealth, dental, vision, LTC
Out-of-pocket costsDeductibles, copays, coinsurance
Medical careDoctor visits, hospital stays
Prescription drugsMedications prescribed by doctor
TransportationMileage to medical appointments
EquipmentWheelchairs, hearing aids, glasses

Calculation Example

ItemAmount
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

FeatureDetails
TypeRefundable tax credit
Received in advanceReduces monthly premium
Received at tax timeIncreases refund or reduces tax owed
ReconciliationMust be reconciled on tax return

Tax Form Requirements

FormPurpose
Form 1095-AHealth Insurance Marketplace Statement
Form 8962Premium Tax Credit calculation
Form 1040Final reconciliation

Reconciliation Outcomes

SituationTax Impact
Advance PTC < Actual PTCAdditional credit/refund
Advance PTC > Actual PTCRepayment required
Advance PTC = Actual PTCNo adjustment

Tax Treatment of Benefits

Health Insurance Benefit Taxation

Benefit SourceTax Treatment
Individual health policyBenefits received tax-free
Medical reimbursementsTax-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.

Test Your Knowledge

A self-employed individual pays $12,000 annually for family health insurance. Their net self-employment income is $8,000. What is their maximum self-employed health insurance deduction?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

What is the AGI threshold for deducting medical expenses as an itemized deduction?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

How are benefits received from an individually-owned health insurance policy taxed?

A
B
C
D