[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 17]
[Revised as of April 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR54.4980B-3]

[Page 291-294]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 54_PENSION EXCISE TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 54.4980B-3  Qualified beneficiaries.

    The determination of who is a qualified beneficiary, an employee, or 
a covered employee, and of who are the similarly situated nonCOBRA 
beneficiaries is addressed in the following questions-and-answers:
    Q-1: Who is a qualified beneficiary?
    A-1: (a)(1) Except as set forth in paragraphs (c) through (f) of 
this Q&A-1, a qualified beneficiary is--
    (i) Any individual who, on the day before a qualifying event, is 
covered under a group health plan by virtue of being on that day either 
a covered employee, the spouse of a covered employee, or a dependent 
child of the covered employee; or
    (ii) Any child who is born to or placed for adoption with a covered 
employee during a period of COBRA continuation coverage.
    (2) In the case of a qualifying event that is the bankruptcy of the 
employer, a covered employee who had retired on or before the date of 
substantial elimination of group health plan coverage is also a 
qualified beneficiary, as is any spouse, surviving spouse, or dependent 
child of such a covered employee if, on the day before the bankruptcy 
qualifying event, the spouse, surviving spouse, or dependent child is a 
beneficiary under the plan.
    (3) In general, an individual (other than a child who is born to or 
placed for adoption with a covered employee during a period of COBRA 
continuation coverage) who is not covered under a plan on the day before 
the qualifying event cannot be a qualified beneficiary with respect to 
that qualifying event, and the reason for the individual's lack of 
actual coverage (such as the individual's having declined participation 
in the plan or failed to satisfy the plan's conditions for 
participation) is not relevant for this purpose. However, if the 
individual is denied or not offered coverage under a plan under 
circumstances in which the denial or failure to offer constitutes a 
violation of applicable law (such as the Americans with Disabilities 
Act, 42 U.S.C. 12101-12213, the special enrollment rules of section 
9801, or the requirements of section 9802 prohibiting discrimination in 
eligibility to enroll in a group health plan based on health status),

[[Page 292]]

then, for purposes of Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 through 54.4980B-10, the 
individual will be considered to have had the coverage that was 
wrongfully denied or not offered.
    (4) Paragraph (b) of this Q&A-1 describes how certain family members 
are not qualified beneficiaries even if they become covered under the 
plan; paragraphs (c), (d), and (e) of this Q&A-1 place limits on the 
general rules of this paragraph (a) concerning who is a qualified 
beneficiary; paragraph (f) of this Q&A-1 provides when an individual who 
has been a qualified beneficiary ceases to be a qualified beneficiary; 
paragraph (g) of this Q&A-1 defines placed for adoption; and paragraph 
(h) of this Q&A-1 contains examples.
    (b) In contrast to a child who is born to or placed for adoption 
with a covered employee during a period of COBRA continuation coverage, 
an individual who marries any qualified beneficiary on or after the date 
of the qualifying event and a newborn or adopted child (other than one 
born to or placed for adoption with a covered employee) are not 
qualified beneficiaries by virtue of the marriage, birth, or placement 
for adoption or by virtue of the individual's status as the spouse or 
the child's status as a dependent of the qualified beneficiary. These 
new family members do not themselves become qualified beneficiaries even 
if they become covered under the plan. (For situations in which a plan 
is required to make coverage available to new family members of a 
qualified beneficiary who is receiving COBRA continuation coverage, see 
Q&A-5 of Sec. 54.4980B-5, paragraph (c) in Q&A-4 of Sec. 54.4980B-5, 
and section 9801(f)(2).)
    (c) An individual is not a qualified beneficiary if, on the day 
before the qualifying event referred to in paragraph (a) of this Q&A-1, 
the individual is covered under the group health plan by reason of 
another individual's election of COBRA continuation coverage and is not 
already a qualified beneficiary by reason of a prior qualifying event.
    (d) A covered employee can be a qualified beneficiary only in 
connection with a qualifying event that is the termination, or reduction 
of hours, of the covered employee's employment, or that is the 
bankruptcy of the employer.
    (e) An individual is not a qualified beneficiary if the individual's 
status as a covered employee is attributable to a period in which the 
individual was a nonresident alien who received from the individual's 
employer no earned income (within the meaning of section 911(d)(2)) that 
constituted income from sources within the United States (within the 
meaning of section 861(a)(3)). If, pursuant to the preceding sentence, 
an individual is not a qualified beneficiary, then a spouse or dependent 
child of the individual is not considered a qualified beneficiary by 
virtue of the relationship to the individual.
    (f) A qualified beneficiary who does not elect COBRA continuation 
coverage in connection with a qualifying event ceases to be a qualified 
beneficiary at the end of the election period (see Q&A-1 of Sec. 
54.4980B-6). Thus, for example, if such a former qualified beneficiary 
is later added to a covered employee's coverage (e.g., during an open 
enrollment period) and then another qualifying event occurs with respect 
to the covered employee, the former qualified beneficiary does not 
become a qualified beneficiary by reason of the second qualifying event. 
If a covered employee who is a qualified beneficiary does not elect 
COBRA continuation coverage during the election period, then any child 
born to or placed for adoption with the covered employee on or after the 
date of the qualifying event is not a qualified beneficiary. Once a 
plan's obligation to make COBRA continuation coverage available to an 
individual who has been a qualified beneficiary ceases under the rules 
of Sec. 54.4980B-7, the individual ceases to be a qualified 
beneficiary.
    (g) For purposes of Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 through 54.4980B-10, 
placement for adoption or being placed for adoption means the assumption 
and retention by the covered employee of a legal obligation for total or 
partial support of a child in anticipation of the adoption of the child. 
The child's placement for adoption with the covered employee terminates 
upon the termination of the legal obligation for total or partial 
support. A child who is immediately adopted by

[[Page 293]]

the covered employee without a preceding placement for adoption is 
considered to be placed for adoption on the date of the adoption.
    (h) The rules of this Q&A-1 are illustrated by the following 
examples:

    Example 1. (i) B is a single employee who voluntarily terminates 
employment and elects COBRA continuation coverage under a group health 
plan. To comply with the requirements of section 9801(f), the plan 
permits a covered employee who marries to have her or his spouse covered 
under the plan. One month after electing COBRA continuation coverage, B 
marries and chooses to have B's spouse covered under the plan.
    (ii) B's spouse is not a qualified beneficiary. Thus, if B dies 
during the period of COBRA continuation coverage, the plan does not have 
to offer B's surviving spouse an opportunity to elect COBRA continuation 
coverage.
    Example 2. (i) C is a married employee who terminates employment. C 
elects COBRA continuation coverage for C but not C's spouse, and C's 
spouse declines to elect such coverage. C's spouse thus ceases to be a 
qualified beneficiary. At the next open enrollment period, C adds the 
spouse as a beneficiary under the plan.
    (ii) The addition of the spouse during the open enrollment period 
does not make the spouse a qualified beneficiary. The plan thus will not 
have to offer the spouse an opportunity to elect COBRA continuation 
coverage upon a later divorce from or death of C.
    Example 3. (i) Under the terms of a group health plan, a covered 
employee's child, upon attaining age 19, ceases to be a dependent 
eligible for coverage.
    (ii) At that time, the child must be offered an opportunity to elect 
COBRA continuation coverage. If the child elects COBRA continuation 
coverage, the child marries during the period of the COBRA continuation 
coverage, and the child's spouse becomes covered under the group health 
plan, the child's spouse is not a qualified beneficiary.
    Example 4. (i) D is a single employee who, upon retirement, is given 
the opportunity to elect COBRA continuation coverage but declines it in 
favor of an alternative offer of 12 months of employer-paid retiree 
health benefits. At the end of the election period, D ceases to be a 
qualified beneficiary and will not have to be given another opportunity 
to elect COBRA continuation coverage (at the end of those 12 months or 
at any other time). D marries E during the period of retiree health 
coverage and, under the terms of that coverage, E becomes covered under 
the plan.
    (ii) If a divorce from or death of D will result in E's losing 
coverage, E will be a qualified beneficiary because E's coverage under 
the plan on the day before the qualifying event (that is, the divorce or 
death) will have been by reason of D's acceptance of 12 months of 
employer-paid coverage after the prior qualifying event (D's retirement) 
rather than by reason of an election of COBRA continuation coverage.
    Example 5. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 4, except that, 
under the terms of the plan, the divorce or death does not cause E to 
lose coverage so that E continues to be covered for the balance of the 
original 12-month period.
    (ii) E does not have to be allowed to elect COBRA continuation 
coverage because the loss of coverage at the end of the 12-month period 
is not caused by the divorce or death, and thus the divorce or death 
does not constitute a qualifying event. See Q&A-1 of Sec. 54.4980B-4.

    Q-2: Who is an employee and who is a covered employee?
    A-2: (a)(1) For purposes of Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 through 54.4980B-
10 (except for purposes of Q&A-5 in Sec. 54.4980B-2, relating to the 
exception from COBRA for plans maintained by an employer with fewer than 
20 employees), an employee is any individual who is eligible to be 
covered under a group health plan by virtue of the performance of 
services for the employer maintaining the plan or by virtue of 
membership in the employee organization maintaining the plan. Thus, for 
purposes of Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 through 54.4980B-10 (except for 
purposes of Q&A-5 in Sec. 54.4980B-2), the following individuals are 
employees if their relationship to the employer maintaining the plan 
makes them eligible to be covered under the plan--
    (i) Self-employed individuals (within the meaning of section 
401(c)(1));
    (ii) Independent contractors (and their employees and independent 
contractors); and
    (iii) Directors (in the case of a corporation).
    (2) Similarly, whenever reference is made in Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 
through 54.4980B-10 (except in Q&A-5 of Sec. 54.4980B-2) to an 
employment relationship (such as by referring to the termination of 
employment of an employee or to an employee's being employed by an 
employer), the reference includes the relationship of those individuals 
who are employees within the meaning of this paragraph (a). See 
paragraph (c) in Q&A-5 of Sec. 54.4980B-2 for a narrower

[[Page 294]]

meaning of employee solely for purposes of Q&A-5 of Sec. 54.4980B-2.
    (b) For purposes of Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 through 54.4980B-10, a 
covered employee is any individual who is (or was) provided coverage 
under a group health plan (other than a plan that is excepted from COBRA 
on the date of the qualifying event; see Q&A-4 of Sec. 54.4980B-2) by 
virtue of being or having been an employee. For example, a retiree or 
former employee who is covered by a group health plan is a covered 
employee if the coverage results in whole or in part from her or his 
previous employment. An employee (or former employee) who is merely 
eligible for coverage under a group health plan is generally not a 
covered employee if the employee (or former employee) is not actually 
covered under the plan. In general, the reason for the employee's (or 
former employee's) lack of actual coverage (such as having declined 
participation in the plan or having failed to satisfy the plan's 
conditions for participation) is not relevant for this purpose. However, 
if the employee (or former employee) is denied or not offered coverage 
under circumstances in which the denial or failure to offer constitutes 
a violation of applicable law (such as the Americans with Disabilities 
Act, 42 U.S.C. 12101 through 12213, the special enrollment rules of 
section 9801, or the requirements of section 9802 prohibiting 
discrimination in eligibility to enroll in a group health plan based on 
health status), then, for purposes of Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 through 
54.4980B-10, the employee (or former employee) will be considered to 
have had the coverage that was wrongfully denied or not offered.
    Q-3: Who are the similarly situated nonCOBRA beneficiaries?
    A-3: For purposes of Sec. Sec. 54.4980B-1 through 54.4980B-10, 
similarly situated nonCOBRA beneficiaries means the group of covered 
employees, spouses of covered employees, or dependent children of 
covered employees receiving coverage under a group health plan 
maintained by the employer or employee organization who are receiving 
that coverage for a reason other than the rights provided under the 
COBRA continuation coverage requirements and who, based on all of the 
facts and circumstances, are most similarly situated to the situation of 
the qualified beneficiary immediately before the qualifying event.

[T.D. 8812, 64 FR 5176, Feb. 3, 1999, as amended by T.D. 8928, 66 FR 
1852, Jan. 10, 2001]