[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-8]

[Page 309-312]
 
                       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-8  Paying for COBRA continuation coverage.

    The following questions-and-answers address paying for COBRA 
continuation coverage:
    Q-1: Can a group health plan require payment for COBRA continuation 
coverage?
    A-1: (a) Yes. For any period of COBRA continuation coverage, a group 
health plan can require the payment of an amount that does not exceed 
102 percent of the applicable premium for that period. (See paragraph 
(b) of this Q&A-1 for a rule permitting a plan to require payment of an 
increased amount due to the disability extension.) The applicable 
premium is defined in section 4980B(f)(4). A group health plan can 
terminate a qualified beneficiary's COBRA continuation coverage as of 
the first day of any period for which timely payment is not made to the 
plan with respect to that qualified beneficiary (see Q&A-1 of Sec. 
54.4980B-7). For the meaning of timely payment, see Q&A-5 of this 
section.
    (b) A group health plan is permitted to require the payment of an 
amount that does not exceed 150 percent of the applicable premium for 
any period of COBRA continuation coverage covering a disabled qualified 
beneficiary (for example, whether single or family coverage) if the 
coverage would not be required to be made available in the absence of a 
disability extension. (See Q&A-5 of Sec. 54.4980B-7 for rules to 
determine whether a qualified beneficiary is entitled to a disability 
extension.) A plan is not permitted to require the payment of an amount 
that exceeds 102 percent of the applicable premium for any period of 
COBRA continuation coverage to which a qualified beneficiary is entitled 
without regard to the disability extension. Thus, if a qualified 
beneficiary entitled to a disability extension experiences a second 
qualifying

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event within the original 18-month maximum coverage period, then the 
plan is not permitted to require the payment of an amount that exceeds 
102 percent of the applicable premium for any period of COBRA 
continuation coverage. By contrast, if a qualified beneficiary entitled 
to a disability extension experiences a second qualifying event after 
the end of the original 18-month maximum coverage period, then the plan 
may require the payment of an amount that is up to 150 percent of the 
applicable premium for the remainder of the period of COBRA continuation 
coverage (that is, from the beginning of the 19th month through the end 
of the 36th month) as long as the disabled qualified beneficiary is 
included in that coverage. The rules of this paragraph (b) are 
illustrated by the following examples; in each example the group health 
plan is subject to COBRA:

    Example 1. (i) An employer maintains a group health plan. The plan 
determines the cost of covering individuals under the plan by reference 
to two categories, individual coverage and family coverage, and the 
applicable premium is determined for those two categories. An employee 
and members of the employee's family are covered under the plan. The 
employee experiences a qualifying event that is the termination of the 
employee's employment. The employee's family qualifies for the 
disability extension because of the disability of the employee's spouse. 
(Timely notice of the disability is provided to the plan administrator.) 
Timely payment of the amount required by the plan for COBRA continuation 
coverage for the family (which does not exceed 102 percent of the cost 
of family coverage under the plan) was made to the plan with respect to 
the employee's family for the first 18 months of COBRA continuation 
coverage, and the disabled spouse and the rest of the family continue to 
receive COBRA continuation coverage through the 29th month.
    (ii) Under these facts, the plan may require payment of up to 150 
percent of the applicable premium for family coverage in order for the 
family to receive COBRA continuation coverage from the 19th month 
through the 29th month. If the plan determined the cost of coverage by 
reference to three categories (such as employee, employee-plus-one-
dependent, employee-plus-two-or-more-dependents) or more than three 
categories, instead of two categories, the plan could still require, 
from the 19th month through the 29th month of COBRA continuation 
coverage, the payment of 150 percent of the cost of coverage for the 
category of coverage that included the disabled spouse.
    Example 2. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
only the covered employee elects and pays for the first 18 months of 
COBRA continuation coverage.
    (ii) Even though the employee's disabled spouse does not elect or 
pay for COBRA continuation coverage, the employee satisfies the 
requirements for the disability extension to apply with respect to the 
employee's qualifying event. Under these facts, the plan may not require 
the payment of more than 102 percent of the applicable premium for 
individual coverage for the entire period of the employee's COBRA 
continuation coverage, including the period from the 19th month through 
the 29th month. If COBRA continuation coverage had been elected and paid 
for with respect to other nondisabled members of the employee's family, 
then the plan could not require the payment of more than 102 percent of 
the applicable premium for family coverage (or for any other appropriate 
category of coverage that might apply to that group of qualified 
beneficiaries under the plan, such as employee-plus-one-dependent or 
employee-plus-two-or-more-dependents) for those family members to 
continue their coverage from the 19th month through the 29th month.

    (c) A group health plan does not fail to comply with section 9802(b) 
(which generally prohibits an individual from being charged, on the 
basis of health status, a higher premium than that charged for similarly 
situated individuals enrolled in the plan) with respect to a qualified 
beneficiary entitled to the disability extension merely because the plan 
requires payment of an amount permitted under paragraph (b) of this Q&A-
1.
    Q-2: When is the applicable premium determined and when can a group 
health plan increase the amount it requires to be paid for COBRA 
continuation coverage?
    A-2: (a) The applicable premium for each determination period must 
be computed and fixed by a group health plan before the determination 
period begins. A determination period is any 12-month period selected by 
the plan, but it must be applied consistently from year to year. The 
determination period is a single period for any benefit package. Thus, 
each qualified beneficiary does not have a separate determination period 
beginning on the date (or anniversaries of the date) that

[[Page 311]]

COBRA continuation coverage begins for that qualified beneficiary.
    (b) During a determination period, a plan can increase the amount it 
requires to be paid for a qualified beneficiary's COBRA continuation 
coverage only in the following three cases:
    (1) The plan has previously charged less than the maximum amount 
permitted under Q&A-1 of this section and the increased amount required 
to be paid does not exceed the maximum amount permitted under Q&A-1 of 
this section;
    (2) The increase occurs during the disability extension and the 
increased amount required to be paid does not exceed the maximum amount 
permitted under paragraph (b) of Q&A-1 of this section; or
    (3) A qualified beneficiary changes the coverage being received (see 
paragraph (c) of this Q&A-2 for rules on how the amount the plan 
requires to be paid may or must change when a qualified beneficiary 
changes the coverage being received).
    (c) If a plan allows similarly situated active employees who have 
not experienced a qualifying event to change the coverage they are 
receiving, then the plan must also allow each qualified beneficiary to 
change the coverage being received on the same terms as the similarly 
situated active employees. (See Q&A-4 in Sec. 54.4980B-5.) If a 
qualified beneficiary changes coverage from one benefit package (or a 
group of benefit packages) to another benefit package (or another group 
of benefit packages), or adds or eliminates coverage for family members, 
then the following rules apply. If the change in coverage is to a 
benefit package, group of benefit packages, or coverage unit (such as 
family coverage, self-plus-one-dependent, or self-plus-two-or-more-
dependents) for which the applicable premium is higher, then the plan 
may increase the amount that it requires to be paid for COBRA 
continuation coverage to an amount that does not exceed the amount 
permitted under Q&A-1 of this section as applied to the new coverage. If 
the change in coverage is to a benefit package, group of benefit 
packages, or coverage unit (such as individual or self-plus-one-
dependent) for which the applicable premium is lower, then the plan 
cannot require the payment of an amount that exceeds the amount 
permitted under Q&A-1 of this section as applied to the new coverage.
    Q-3: Must a plan allow payment for COBRA continuation coverage to be 
made in monthly installments?
    A-3: Yes. A group health plan must allow payment for COBRA 
continuation coverage to be made in monthly installments. A group health 
plan is permitted to also allow the alternative of payment for COBRA 
continuation coverage being made at other intervals (for example, 
weekly, quarterly, or semiannually).
    Q-4: Is a plan required to allow a qualified beneficiary to choose 
to have the first payment for COBRA continuation coverage applied 
prospectively only?
    A-4: No. A plan is permitted to apply the first payment for COBRA 
continuation coverage to the period of coverage beginning immediately 
after the date on which coverage under the plan would have been lost on 
account of the qualifying event. Of course, if the group health plan 
allows a qualified beneficiary to waive COBRA continuation coverage for 
any period before electing to receive COBRA continuation coverage, the 
first payment is not applied to the period of the waiver.
    Q-5: What is timely payment for COBRA continuation coverage?
    A-5: (a) Except as provided in this paragraph (a) or in paragraph 
(b) or (d) of this Q&A-5, timely payment for a period of COBRA 
continuation coverage under a group health plan means payment that is 
made to the plan by the date that is 30 days after the first day of that 
period. Payment that is made to the plan by a later date is also 
considered timely payment if either--
    (1) Under the terms of the plan, covered employees or qualified 
beneficiaries are allowed until that later date to pay for their 
coverage for the period; or
    (2) Under the terms of an arrangement between the employer or 
employee organization and an insurance company, health maintenance 
organization, or other entity that provides

[[Page 312]]

plan benefits on the employer's or employee organization's behalf, the 
employer or employee organization is allowed until that later date to 
pay for coverage of similarly situated nonCOBRA beneficiaries for the 
period.
    (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this Q&A-5, a plan cannot 
require payment for any period of COBRA continuation coverage for a 
qualified beneficiary earlier than 45 days after the date on which the 
election of COBRA continuation coverage is made for that qualified 
beneficiary.
    (c) If, after COBRA continuation coverage has been elected for a 
qualified beneficiary, a provider of health care (such as a physician, 
hospital, or pharmacy) contacts the plan to confirm coverage of a 
qualified beneficiary for a period for which the plan has not yet 
received payment, the plan must give a complete response to the health 
care provider about the qualified beneficiary's COBRA continuation 
coverage rights, if any, described in paragraphs (a), (b), and (d) of 
this Q&A-5. For example, if the plan provides coverage during the 30- 
and 45-day grace periods described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this 
Q&A-5 but cancels coverage retroactively if payment is not made by the 
end of the applicable grace period, then the plan must inform a provider 
with respect to a qualified beneficiary for whom payment has not been 
received that the qualified beneficiary is covered but that the coverage 
is subject to retroactive termination if timely payment is not made. 
Similarly, if the plan cancels coverage if it has not received payment 
by the first day of a period of coverage but retroactively reinstates 
coverage if payment is made by the end of the grace period for that 
period of coverage, then the plan must inform the provider that the 
qualified beneficiary currently does not have coverage but will have 
coverage retroactively to the first date of the period if timely payment 
is made. (See paragraph (b) of Q&A-3 in Sec. 54.4980B-6 for similar 
rules that the plan must follow in confirming coverage during the 
election period.)
    (d) If timely payment is made to the plan in an amount that is not 
significantly less than the amount the plan requires to be paid for a 
period of coverage, then the amount paid is deemed to satisfy the plan's 
requirement for the amount that must be paid, unless the plan notifies 
the qualified beneficiary of the amount of the deficiency and grants a 
reasonable period of time for payment of the deficiency to be made. For 
this purpose, as a safe harbor, 30 days after the date the notice is 
provided is deemed to be a reasonable period of time. An amount is not 
significantly less than the amount the plan requires to be paid for a 
period of coverage if and only if the shortfall is no greater than the 
lesser of the following two amounts:
    (1) Fifty dollars (or such other amount as the Commissioner may 
provide in a revenue ruling, notice, or other guidance published in the 
Internal Revenue Bulletin (see Sec. 601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this 
chapter)); or
    (2) 10 percent of the amount the plan requires to be paid.
    (e) Payment is considered made on the date on which it is sent to 
the plan.

[T.D. 8812, 64 FR 5186, Feb. 3, 1999, as amended by T.D. 8928, 66 FR 
1854, Jan. 10, 2001]