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If you’re a US citizen moving or living abroad, review how the Affordable Care Act (ACA) affects you before purchasing international health insurance.
For U.S. citizens planning an extended trip outside of the U.S., retirees abroad, and expatriates, some new questions have to be answered when considering an international health insurance plan:
They are typically designed for any international living in a foreign country and are not required to meet the specific requirements of individual countries.
Additionally, you will find they are generally much less expensive. Note: Some ACA-compliant US health insurance plans do offer limited international benefits.
The answer to the second question is a little more complicated. The U.S. government understands that it would be incredibly hard, if not impossible, to monitor and manage all international plans.
Therefore, they have made accommodations for those of you planning a trip or move, or who are currently living abroad.
Read more about Health Insurance for US Citizens Abroad and Insurance Plans for Foreigners in the USA.
330 Day Rule: U.S. citizens who spent at least 330 full days outside of the U.S. during a 12-month period are not required to maintain health insurance that meets the requirements of minimum essential coverage (MEC). If you’re uninsured and living abroad under this definition, you qualify for a health insurance exemption. This means you don’t have to pay the tax penalty that other uninsured people must pay.
See question 12 on this IRS website to learn more about the rules for people living abroad.
Note: Once you return to the US, you will be immediately eligible to apply for domestic insurance, with no exclusions for pre-existing conditions.
If it is an open enrollment period, you will be eligible, as everyone else is. If it is not open enrollment, then you qualify for Special Enrollment Period as you have both 1) recently moved and 2) you have had a material change of status (you have moved and lost your exemption).
If you are abroad for up to 2 consecutive months without coverage in one tax year or are otherwise covered by an eligible plan, then you should be fine. There is something called the short coverage gap.
Specifically, if you went without coverage for less than three consecutive months during the year. Coverage for one day of a month counts as coverage for the entire month.
For those who are out of the U.S. for more than three months but less than 330 days (see above), you should consider your options.
In general, as a U.S. citizen, you are expected to have coverage that meets the minimum essential requirements.
As of 2019, there is no longer a penalty if you choose to purchase a global medical plan instead of a domestic plan.
If you are genuinely living abroad and only visit the U.S. occasionally, you will be ok with the expatriate medical insurance plan of your choice.
For insurance plans purchased prior to 2018, if you could afford health insurance but chose not to buy it, you may have been assessed a fee called the Individual Shared Responsibility Payment. (The fee is sometimes called the “penalty,” “fine,” or “individual mandate.”)
Starting with the 2019 plan year (for which you’ll file taxes in April 2020), the Shared Responsibility Payment no longer applies.
ACA compliance is a personal choice. For some, the cost of having a plan in the U.S. to meet minimum essential coverage may have been too high.
Especially when you consider you most likely would not be covered by that plan if you are treated outside the U.S.
For those who would choose to make shared responsibility payments, here are some important points:
The rules governing shared responsibility payments change each year. Visit HealthCare.gov for help determining how you would pay for not having health insurance in 2016, 2017, and 2018.
Again, starting with the 2019 plan year (for which you’ll file taxes in April 2020), the Shared Responsibility Payment, or ACA penalty, no longer applies.
Best Options: Health Insurance for US Citizens Abroad and Insurance for International Citizens Living in the USA