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June 6, 2019
Question

My wife is self-employed and I'm retired; can we enter premiums for our ACA Marketplace plan on form 1095-A?

  • June 6, 2019
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

We have no employer-sponsored plans available; COBRA continuation was exhausted. 

Self-employment income exceeds the premiums paid. 

No subsidy on the marketplace purchased plan; we paid full freight on the premiums.

1 reply

Employee
June 6, 2019

Yes, your wife's health insurance premiums are deductible as a business expense.

Here's how to report that business expense:

  • Open your return and click Federal Taxes>Wages & Income.
  • Continue to How do you want to enter your business income? and click I'll choose what I work on.
  • Select Update for Business Income and Expenses
  • Select Edit next to the business
  • Scroll down to All Other Expenses and select Start or Update
  • Select Start or Update for Self-Employed Health Insurance Premiums

As a self-employed person, you're allowed to deduct premiums up to the amount of your net business income; the premiums will appear on Line 29 of your Form 1040. Any payments that exceed your net business income will flow over to Schedule A as a personal medical expense. We'll automatically handle the line items and calculations for you.

June 6, 2019
Thanks for the answer, TurboTaxRichardG.

The Box next to the Self-Employed Health Insurance Premiums line in Other Expenses for the business just wants me to type in a number; it doesn't have a start or update button.

The Learn More link for that item states "Do not include health insurance purchased through a Health Insurance Marketplace (also known as an exchange). These premiums are entered on Form 1095-A in the program."

At the bottom of Form 1095-A (forms view) is the Business Related Premiums Information Smart Worksheet box, where my wife's Sched. C business is selected. By "related", do they mean "apply these premiums against this income"? If so, we're good! We would have purchased the coverage regardless of having the business income or not, and I'm a bit unsure about the meaning of "related" here.