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Employee
Services
COBRA FAQ's
- What is COBRA continuation
health coverage?
- What does COBRA
do?
- Who is entitled
to benefits under COBRA?
- How does a person
become eligible for COBRA continuation coverage?
- What group health
plans are subject to COBRA?
- What process must
individuals follow to elect COBRA continuation coverage?
- How long after a
qualifying event do I have to elect COBRA coverage?
- How do I file a
COBRA claim for benefits?
- Can individuals
qualify for longer periods of COBRA continuation coverage?
- If I waive COBRA
coverage during the election period, can I still get coverage at a later
date?
- Under COBRA, what
benefits must be covered?
- When does COBRA
coverage begin?
- How long does COBRA
coverage last?
- Who pays for COBRA
coverage?
- If I elect COBRA,
how much do I pay?
- Can I receive COBRA
benefits while on FMLA leave?
- What is the Federal
Government's role in COBRA?
- I am a federal
employee. Can I receive benefits under COBRA?
- Am I eligible for
COBRA if my company closed or went bankrupt and there is no health plan?
- Is a divorced spouse
entitled to COBRA coverage from their former spouses' group health plan?
- How do I find out
about COBRA coverage and how do I elect to take it?
1. What is COBRA continuation health coverage?
Congress passed the landmark Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act (COBRA) health benefit provisions in 1986. The law amends the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act, the Internal Revenue Code and the Public
Health Service Act to provide continuation of group health coverage that
otherwise might be terminated.
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2. What does COBRA do?
COBRA provides certain former employees, retirees, spouses, former spouses,
and dependent children the right to temporary continuation of health coverage
at group rates. This coverage, however, is only available when coverage
is lost due to certain specific events. Group health coverage for COBRA
participants is usually more expensive than health coverage for active
employees, since usually the employer pays a part of the premium for active
employees while COBRA participants generally pay the entire premium themselves.
It is ordinarily less expensive, though, than individual health coverage.
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3. Who is entitled to benefits under COBRA?
There are three elements to qualifying for COBRA benefits. COBRA establishes
specific criteria for plans, qualified beneficiaries, and qualifying events:
Plan Coverage - Group health plans for employers with
20 or more employees on more than 50 percent of its typical business days
in the previous calendar year are subject to COBRA. Both full and part-time
employees are counted to determine whether a plan is subject to COBRA.
Each part-time employee counts as a fraction of an employee, with the
fraction equal to the number of hours that the part-time employee worked
divided by the hours an employee must work to be considered full time.
Qualified Beneficiaries - A qualified beneficiary generally
is an individual covered by a group health plan on the day before a qualifying
event who is either an employee, the employee's spouse, or an employee's
dependent child. In certain cases, a retired employee, the retired employee's
spouse, and the retired employee's dependent children may be qualified
beneficiaries. In addition, any child born to or placed for adoption with
a covered employee during the period of COBRA coverage is considered a
qualified beneficiary. Agents, independent contractors, and directors
who participate in the group health plan may also be qualified beneficiaries.
Qualifying Events - Qualifying events are certain events
that would cause an individual to lose health coverage. The type of qualifying
event will determine who the qualified beneficiaries are and the amount
of time that a plan must offer the health coverage to them under COBRA.
A plan, at its discretion, may provide longer periods of
continuation coverage.
Qualifying Events for Employees:
- Voluntary or involuntary
termination of employment for reasons other than
gross misconduct |
- Reduction in the
number of hours of employment
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- Qualifying Events
for Spouses:
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- Voluntary or involuntary
termination of the covered employee's employment for any reason
other than gross misconduct
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- Reduction in
the hours worked by the covered employee
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- Covered employee's
becoming entitled to Medicare
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- Divorce or legal
separation of the covered employee
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- Death of the covered
employee
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- Qualifying Events
for Dependent Children:
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- Loss of dependent
child status under the plan rules
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- Voluntary or involuntary
termination of the covered employee's employment for any reason
other than gross misconduct
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- Reduction in the
hours worked by the covered employee
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- Covered employee's
becoming entitled to Medicare
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- Divorce or legal
separation of the covered employee
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- Death of the covered
employee
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4. How does a person
become eligible for COBRA
continuation coverage?
To be eligible for COBRA coverage, you must have been enrolled in your
employer's health plan when you worked and the health plan must continue
to be in effect for active employees. COBRA continuation coverage is available
upon the occurrence of a qualifying event that would, except for the COBRA
continuation coverage, cause an individual to lose his or her health care
coverage.
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5. What group health plans are subject to COBRA?
The law generally covers health plans maintained by private-sector employers
with 20 or more employees, employee organizations, or state or local governments.
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6. What process must
individuals follow to elect COBRA continuation coverage?
Employers must notify plan administrators of a qualifying event within
30 days after an employee's death, termination, reduced hours of employment
or entitlement to Medicare.
A qualified beneficiary must notify the plan administrator of a qualifying
event within 60 days after divorce or legal separation or a child's ceasing
to be covered as a dependent under plan rules.
Plan participants and beneficiaries generally must be sent an election
notice not later than 14 days after the plan administrator receives notice
that a qualifying event has occurred. The individual then has 60 days
to decide whether to elect COBRA continuation coverage. The person has
45 days after electing coverage to pay the initial premium.
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7. How long after a
qualifying event do I have to elect
COBRA coverage?
Qualified beneficiaries must be given an election period during which
each qualified beneficiary may choose whether to elect COBRA coverage.
Each qualified beneficiary may independently elect COBRA coverage. A covered
employee or the covered employee's spouse may elect COBRA coverage on
behalf of all other qualified beneficiaries. A parent or legal guardian
may elect on behalf of a minor child. Qualified beneficiaries must be
given at least 60 days for the election. This period is measured from
the later of the coverage loss date or the date the COBRA election notice
is provided by the employer or plan administrator. The election notice
must be provided in person or by first class mail within 14 days after
the plan administrator receives notice that a qualifying event has occurred.
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8. How do I file a COBRA claim for benefits?
Health plan rules must explain how to obtain benefits and must include
written procedures for processing claims. Claims procedures must be described
in the Summary
Plan Description.
You should submit a claim for benefits in accordance with the plan's rules
for filing claims. If the claim is denied, you must be given notice of
the denial in writing generally within 90 days after the claim is filed.
The notice should state the reasons for the denial, any additional information
needed to support the claim, and procedures for appealing the denial.
You will have at least 60 days to appeal a denial and you must receive
a decision on the appeal generally within 60 days after that.
Contact the plan administrator for more information on filing a claim
for benefits. Complete plan rules are available from employers or benefits
offices. There can be charges up to 25 cents a page for copies of plan
rules.
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list
9. Can individuals
qualify for longer periods of COBRA
continuation coverage?
Yes, disability can extend the 18 month period of continuation coverage
for a qualifying event that is a termination of employment or reduction
of hours. To qualify for additional months of COBRA continuation coverage,
the qualified beneficiary must:
Have a ruling from the Social Security Administration that he or she became
disabled within the first 60 days of COBRA continuation coverage
Send the plan a copy of the Social Security ruling letter within 60 days
of receipt, but prior to expiration of the 18-month period of coverage
If these requirements are met, the entire family qualifies for an additional
11 months of COBRA continuation coverage. Plans can charge 150% of the
premium cost for the extended period of coverage.
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10. If I waive COBRA
coverage during the election period, can I still get coverage at a later
date?
If a qualified beneficiary waives COBRA coverage during the election period,
he or she may revoke the waiver of coverage before the end of the election
period. A beneficiary may then elect COBRA coverage. Then, the plan need
only provide continuation coverage beginning on the date the waiver is
revoked.
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11. Under COBRA, what
benefits must be covered?
Qualified beneficiaries must be offered coverage identical to that available
to similarly situated beneficiaries who are not receiving COBRA coverage
under the plan (generally, the same coverage that the qualified beneficiary
had immediately before qualifying for continuation coverage). A change
in the benefits under the plan for the active employees will also apply
to qualified beneficiaries. Qualified beneficiaries must be allowed to
make the same choices given to non-COBRA beneficiaries under the plan,
such as during periods of open enrollment by the plan.
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12. When does COBRA
coverage begin?
COBRA coverage begins on the date that health care coverage would otherwise
have been lost by reason of a qualifying event.
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13. How long does
COBRA coverage last?
COBRA establishes required periods of coverage for continuation health
benefits. A plan, however, may provide longer periods of coverage beyond
those required by COBRA. COBRA beneficiaries generally are eligible for
group coverage during a maximum of 18 months for qualifying events due
to employment termination or reduction of hours of work. Certain qualifying
events, or a second qualifying event during the initial period of coverage,
may permit a beneficiary to receive a maximum of 36 months of coverage.
Coverage begins on the date that coverage would otherwise have been lost
by reason of a qualifying event and will end at the end of the maximum
period. It may end earlier if:
- Premiums are not
paid on a timely basis.
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- The employer
ceases to maintain any group health plan.
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After the COBRA election, coverage is obtained with
another employer group health plan that does not contain any exclusion
or limitation with respect to any pre-existing condition of such beneficiary.
However, if other group health coverage is obtained prior to the COBRA
election, COBRA coverage may not be discontinued, even if the other coverage
continues after the COBRA election.
After the COBRA election, a beneficiary becomes entitled to Medicare benefits.
However, if Medicare is obtained prior to COBRA election, COBRA coverage
may not be discontinued, even if the other coverage continues after the
COBRA election.
Although COBRA specifies certain periods of time that continued health
coverage must be offered to qualified beneficiaries, COBRA does not prohibit
plans from offering continuation health coverage that goes beyond the
COBRA periods.
Some plans allow participants and beneficiaries to convert group health
coverage to an individual policy. If this option is generally available
from the plan, a qualified beneficiary who pays for COBRA coverage must
be given the option of converting to an individual policy at the end of
the COBRA continuation coverage period. The option must be given to enroll
in a conversion health plan within 180 days before COBRA coverage ends.
The premium for a conversion policy may be more expensive than the premium
of a group plan, and the conversion policy may provide a lower level of
coverage. The conversion option, however, is not available if the beneficiary
ends COBRA coverage before reaching the end of the maximum period of COBRA
coverage.
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14. Who pays for COBRA coverage?
Beneficiaries may be required to pay for COBRA coverage. The premium cannot
exceed 102 percent of the cost to the plan for similarly situated individuals
who have not incurred a qualifying event, including both the portion paid
by employees and any portion paid by the employer before the qualifying
event, plus 2 percent for administrative costs.
For qualified beneficiaries receiving the 11 month disability extension
of coverage, the premium for those additional months may be increased
to 150 percent of the plan's total cost of coverage.
COBRA premiums may be increased if the costs to the plan increase but
generally must be fixed in advance of each 12-month premium cycle. The
plan must allow you to pay premiums on a monthly basis if you ask to do
so, and the plan may allow you to make payments at other intervals (weekly
or quarterly).
The initial premium payment must be made within 45 days after the date
of the COBRA election by the qualified beneficiary. Payment generally
must cover the period of coverage from the date of COBRA election retroactive
to the date of the loss of coverage due to the qualifying event. Premiums
for successive periods of coverage are due on the date stated in the plan
with a minimum 30-day grace period for payments. Payment is considered
to be made on the date it is sent to the plan.
If premiums are not paid by the first day of the period of coverage, the
plan has the option to cancel coverage until payment is received and then
reinstate coverage retroactively to the beginning of the period of coverage.
If the amount of the payment made to the plan is made in error but is
not significantly less than the amount due, the plan is required to notify
you of the deficiency and grant a reasonable period (for this purpose,
30 days is considered reasonable) to pay the difference. The plan is not
obligated to send monthly premium notices.
COBRA beneficiaries remain subject to the rules of the plan and therefore
must satisfy all costs related to co-payments and deductibles, and are
subject to catastrophic and other benefit limits.
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15. If I elect COBRA, how much do I pay?
When you were an active employee, your employer may have paid all or part
of your group health premiums. Under COBRA, as a former employee no longer
receiving benefits, you will usually pay the entire premium amount, that
is, the portion of the premium that you paid as an active employee and
the amount of the contribution made by your employer. In addition, there
may be a 2 percent administrative fee.
While COBRA rates may seem high, you will be paying group premium rates,
which are usually lower than individual rates.
Since it is likely that there will be a lapse of a month or more between
the date of layoff and the time you make the COBRA election decision,
you may have to pay health premiums retroactively-from the time of separation
from the company. The first premium, for instance, will cover the entire
time since your last day of employment with your former employer.
You should also be aware that it is your responsibility to pay for COBRA
coverage even if you do not receive a monthly statement.
Although they are not required to do so, some employers may subsidize
COBRA coverage.
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16. Can I receive
COBRA benefits while on FMLA leave?
The Family and Medical Leave Act, effective August 5, 1993, requires an
employer to maintain coverage under any group health plan for an employee
on FMLA leave under the same conditions coverage would have been provided
if the employee had continued working. Coverage provided under the FMLA
is not COBRA coverage, and FMLA leave is not a qualifying event under
COBRA. A COBRA qualifying event may occur, however, when an employer's
obligation to maintain health benefits under FMLA ceases, such as when
an employee notifies an employer of his or her intent not to return to
work.
Further information on FMLA is available from the nearest office of the
Wage and Hour Division, listed in most telephone directories under U.S.
Government, U.S. Department of Labor, Employment Standards Administration.
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17. What is the Federal Government's role
in COBRA?
COBRA continuation coverage laws are administered by several agencies.
The Departments of Labor and Treasury have jurisdiction over private-sector
health group health plans. The Department of Health and Human Services
administers the continuation coverage law as it affects public-sector
health plans.
The Labor Department's interpretive and regulatory responsibility is limited
to the disclosure and notification requirements of COBRA. If you need
further information on your disclosure or notification rights under a
private-sector plan, or about ERISA generally, telephone EBSA's Toll-Free
Employee & Employer Hotline at: 1.866.444.3272, or write to:
U.S. Department of Labor
Employee Benefits Security Administration
Division of Technical Assistance and Inquiries
200 Constitution Avenue NW, Suite N-5619
Washington, DC 20210 |
The Internal Revenue Service, Department of the Treasury,
has issued regulations on COBRA provisions relating to eligibility, coverage
and premiums in 26 CFR Part 54, Continuation Coverage Requirements Applicable
to Group Health Plans. Both the Departments of Labor and Treasury share
jurisdiction for enforcement of these provisions.
The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services offers information about
COBRA provisions for public-sector employees. You can write them at this
address:
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services
7500 Security Boulevard
Mail Stop S3-16-16
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850
Tel 410.786.3000 |
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18. I am a federal
employee. Can I receive benefits under COBRA?
Federal employees are covered by a law similar to COBRA. Those employees
should contact the personnel office serving their agency for more information
on temporary extensions of health benefits.
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19. Am I eligible
for COBRA if my company closed or went bankrupt and there is no health
plan?
If there is no longer a health plan, there is no COBRA coverage available.
If, however, there is another plan offered by the company, you may be
covered under that plan. Union members who are covered by a collective
bargaining agreement that provides for a medical plan also may be entitled
to continued coverage.
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20. Is a divorced spouse entitled to COBRA coverage
from their former spouses’ group health plan?
Under COBRA, participants, covered spouses and dependent children may
continue their plan coverage for a limited time when they would otherwise
lose coverage due to a particular event, such as divorce (or legal separation).
A covered employee’s spouse who would lose coverage due to a divorce
may elect continuation coverage under the plan for a maximum of 36 months.
A qualified beneficiary must notify the plan administrator of a qualifying
event within 60 days after divorce or legal separation. After being notified
of a divorce, the plan administrator must give notice, generally within
14 days, to the qualified beneficiary of the right to elect COBRA continuation
coverage.
Divorced spouses may call their plan administrator or the EBSA Toll-Free
Employee & Employer Hotline number, 1.866.444.EBSA (3272) if they
have questions about COBRA continuation coverage or their rights under
ERISA.
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21. How do I find
out about COBRA coverage and how do I elect to take it?
Employers or health plan administrators must provide an initial general
notice if you are entitled to COBRA benefits. You probably received the
initial notice about COBRA coverage when you were hired.
When you are no longer eligible for health coverage, your employer has
to provide you with a specific notice regarding your rights to COBRA continuation
benefits.
Employers must notify their plan administrators within 30 days after an
employee's termination or after a reduction in hours that causes and employee
to lose health benefits.
The plan administrator must provide notice to individual employees of
their right to elect COBRA coverage within 14 days after the administrator
has received notice from
the employer.
You must respond to this notice and elect COBRA coverage by the 60th day
after the written notice is sent or the day health care coverage ceased,
whichever is later. Otherwise, you will lose all rights to COBRA benefits.
Spouses and dependent children covered under your health plan have an
independent right to elect COBRA coverage upon your termination or reduction
in hours. If, for instance, you have a family member with an illness at
the time you are laid off, that person alone can
elect coverage.
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