Common Questions
Answers to your common questions
All employers are affected by the ACA. However, the requirements differ depending on the number of employees you have. All employers must offer affordable medical coverage to their full-time employees and their children up to age 26.
Employers with fewer than 50 full-time employees (or under 100 employees where required by the state) must offer health plans that cover the 10 Essential Health Benefits (EHB). This includes pediatric dental and vision coverage for children to age 19. For small employers, maintaining your existing dental benefits may minimize disruption and mean less administrative work.
Your business may be subject to penalties if it doesn’t meet ACA requirements. Please consult your Broker, Consultant or Tax Advisor for more information.
It depends on the type of coverage your business offers.
Medical carriers are required to offer a medical plan containing Essential Health Benefits (EHBs) including pediatric dental and vision coverage for employers with fewer than 50 full-time employees (or fewer than 100 employees where required by state law).
However, medical carriers may sell products that don’t include pediatric dental coverage if medical carriers are "reasonably assured" that employers have obtained stand-alone dental coverage from a dental carrier.
These are 10 categories of services that certain health insurance plans must cover under the Affordable Care Act. The 10 EHBs include:
- out-patient services
- emergency services
- hospitalization
- laboratory services
- maternity and newborn care
- mental health and substance abuse services, including behavioral health treatment
- prescription drugs
- rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices
- preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management
- pediatric services, including oral and vision care
Yes. Most* businesses can meet the essential health benefits requirement for pediatric dental without going through health insurance marketplaces.
To help the employees of our small-business customers comply with the ACA, MetLife added pediatric dental benefits to many of MetLife's dental benefit plans for employers with fewer than 50 employees (or fewer than 100 employees in some states)*. This means that you will be able to continue offering dental benefits like you have always done. There's no need to bundle your dental benefits with your medical coverage. In fact, maintaining your dental benefit as a fully-insured stand-alone plan may avoid many of the complicated ACA regulations.
*Not available in all states
To qualify as an excepted benefit, the dental plan must either: be offered under a separate insurance policy from the employer’s medical plan; or, if embedded in an employer's medical plan, must not be considered an integral part of the employer’s medical plan.
To not be considered an integral part of the employer's medical plan, participants must have the right to choose not to receive dental coverage and participants must pay an additional premium for the dental coverage.
The cost for pediatric dental benefits varies by state. The cost for this benefit will be applied during standard renewal. Please speak to your Broker, Consultant or MetLife Account Representative for more details.
Also known as exchanges, these marketplaces help small businesses compare costs and different types of features for products sold on the exchange. However, we believe it’ll be possible for your business to meet the essential health benefits requirement for pediatric dental without going through health insurance marketplaces.
On-exchange dental plans are bought through public marketplaces. Off-exchange refers to dental plans that are purchased outside of these public exchanges through traditional sales channels.
The out-of-pocket annual maximum is the most that participants are required to pay during a plan year in cost-sharing for covered children under the age of 19, before the carrier begins to pay 100% of the maximum allowed charge for covered services.
This limit doesn’t include premiums, balance billing charges, the cost of health care services not covered by the plan or services provided by out-of-network providers.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) instructed that individual out-of-pocket annual maximums will be $375 and family out-of-pocket annual maximums will be $750 (applies to two or more covered children) for all dental plans that include the pediatric dental essential health benefit.
Depending on qualifications, such as number of employees and average income, your business may qualify for a small business tax credit. We encourage you to go through the steps in the IRS Small Business Healthcare Tax Credit Worksheet to see if you are eligible for a credit.