Part 1 – ACA Reporting Requirements Made Simple: What Employers Need to Know for 2025
December 2nd 2025

ACA reporting is one of those “small mistake, big consequences” areas. In 2025, affordability rules changed again, penalties continue to climb, and the IRS has far less patience for messy reporting. If you’re in HR, payroll, or benefits, the goal isn’t perfection—it’s a documented, repeatable process that keeps you compliant and audit-ready.
This guide breaks down the 2025 ACA basics in plain English: who has to comply, what needs to be tracked, what “affordable” really means, and how to reduce your risk before you file.
Read the 3 Part Series
- Part 1: ACA Reporting Requirements Made Simple: What Employers Need to Know for 2025
- Part 2: Avoiding ACA Penalties in 2025: The Most Common (and Costly) Employer Mistakes
- Part 3: Turning ACA Data into Strategy: How HR Teams Can Use Compliance Insights to Drive Smarter Benefits Decisions

What Is ACA Reporting (and Who Has to Do It)?
ACA reporting is how Applicable Large Employers (ALEs) prove they offered qualifying health coverage—and how the IRS determines whether penalties apply.
You’re likely an ALE if:
- You averaged 50 or more full-time employees (FTEs) and full-time equivalents in the prior year.
Key definitions you need right:
- ALE (Applicable Large Employer): Employer with 50+ FTEs (full-time + equivalents).
- Full-time employee (ACA definition): Generally 30+ hours/week (or 130+ hours/month).
- Full-time equivalent: Part-time hours combined to reach “equivalent” full-time counts.
If you’re an ALE, the ACA requires you to:
Report those offers using IRS forms.ifferent — and your HR tech must reflect that.
Offer coverage to at least 95% of full-time employees (and dependents), and
Ensure coverage meets ACA standards for minimum essential coverage and affordability, and
Key ACA Updates for 2025 Employers Need to Know
Here are the biggest items that impact reporting and risk:
1) Affordability threshold changed for 2025
For 2025, the employee’s share of the lowest-cost, self-only plan that provides minimum value must not exceed 9.02% of household income.
Why it matters: affordability is one of the biggest triggers for penalties—especially when employees qualify for subsidized marketplace coverage.
2) New/expanded reporting expectations
If your organization offers an ICHRA (Individual Coverage HRA), there are additional reporting considerations, including new fields that apply specifically in that scenario (like more detailed data requirements tied to ICHRA reporting).
3) Penalties continue to pressure accuracy
There are separate penalty categories for:
- Not offering coverage when required, and
- Offering coverage that isn’t affordable or doesn’t meet minimum value,
- Plus separate penalties for filing late or incorrectly.
Bottom line: ACA reporting is not just a year-end form project. It’s a year-round data discipline.
ACA Requirements in Plain Language (2025)
If you’re an ALE, ACA compliance typically boils down to:
Offer coverage to the right people
- Offer coverage to full-time employees (as defined by ACA).
- Offer to at least 95% of them, or you increase penalty exposure.
Offer coverage that meets ACA standards
- MEC (Minimum Essential Coverage): The plan qualifies as ACA-compliant coverage.
- MV (Minimum Value): The plan pays at least 60% of covered costs.
- Affordability: Employee-only cost meets the 9.02% threshold for 2025.
The #1 Thing Employers Get Wrong: Eligibility Tracking
Most ACA reporting failures start long before forms are filed. They start with inaccurate eligibility tracking for employees whose hours fluctuate.
Employees that commonly create ACA risk:
- Variable-hour employees
- Seasonal employees
- Part-time employees who occasionally cross full-time thresholds
- Employees working across multiple locations or departments
- New hires and rehires with inconsistent onboarding timing
The fix: use a clear measurement strategy
Many employers use a look-back measurement period to determine who counts as full-time for benefits eligibility, especially for variable-hour employees. This approach gives you defensible, documented eligibility decisions—and more predictable compliance.
If your eligibility tracking is shaky, your 1095-Cs will be shaky. And that’s when the IRS steps in.
What “Affordable Coverage” Means in 2025 (Without the Confusion)
Affordability is difficult because employers usually don’t know an employee’s household income. That’s why the IRS allows safe harbors employers can use to prove affordability using data they do have.
Common safe harbors used for affordability:
- W-2 Safe Harbor: Based on an employee’s W-2 wages
- Rate of Pay Safe Harbor: Based on hourly rate (or salary)
- Federal Poverty Level (FPL) Safe Harbor: Simplest approach for broad compliance consistency
The best safe harbor is the one that fits your workforce and reduces your risk—but only if you apply it consistently and document it.
ACA Reporting Forms Employers Must File
If you’re an ALE, your reporting typically involves:
Form 1095-C (Employee Statement)
Used to report:
- Whether coverage was offered
- What kind of coverage was offered
- Whether it was affordable
- Coverage details by month
Form 1094-C (Employer Transmittal)
A summary form sent to the IRS that includes:
- Employer information
- Confirmation of offers of coverage across the year
- Monthly counts and compliance indicators
- Controlled group info (if applicable)
These aren’t “fill in the blank” forms. They rely heavily on accurate monthly data and correct code usage.
ACA Due Dates Employers Should Have on Their Radar
ACA deadlines tend to sneak up because teams are also managing year-end payroll, benefits renewals, and W-2 prep.
You should operate with a “pre-close” approach:
- Validate data early
- Audit eligibility and offers before year-end
- Lock down reporting details in January rather than rushing late February
If you’re routinely “sorting it out” right before filing deadlines, you’re operating in the highest-risk zone.
How to Simplify ACA Reporting in 2025 (Practical Process)
Here’s what a clean ACA compliance workflow looks like:
1) Monthly tracking discipline
- Confirm hours, status changes, and measurement outcomes monthly—not annually.
- Rerun reports and fix errors as they appear (not after the year ends).
2) Pre-year-end ACA audit
Before you ever touch forms:
- Validate who was full-time by ACA definition
- Confirm offers of coverage were made correctly
- Check dependent offer logic and documentation
- Review affordability using your chosen safe harbor
3) Don’t guess—document
If the IRS questions your reporting, your best defense is:
- Clear method
- Consistent application
- Clean records
4) Don’t make your team carry this alone
ACA reporting shouldn’t require heroics from HR or payroll every February. If you’re relying on one person who “knows how it works,” you’ve got key-person risk and compliance risk in the same spot.
The Takeaway: ACA Compliance in 2025 Is a System, Not a Task
ACA reporting in 2025 rewards employers who do two things:
- Track eligibility and offers accurately all year, and
- Validate affordability and reporting readiness before year-end.
If you’re already thinking, “We’re probably close…but not sure,” that’s the signal to tighten up now—not after you receive an IRS letter.
Want the Simple Version?
If you want a straightforward roadmap your team can use internally, we can send you the 2025 ACA Compliance Checklist—a step-by-step guide covering tracking, affordability, audits, and reporting prep.
And if you want an expert set of eyes on your current process, MP can help you run a quick ACA review to identify risks before filings go out.

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