Facts: Client, retired State of California worker receiving retirement benefits from CalPERS. There is about $165 deducted from his retirement check (pre-tax) each month ($1,985/year). Client is also self-employed as a consultant ... no employees. His consulting business had a $5k profit on Schedule C for 2010. The CalPERS deduction is for a Blue Shield plan.
Question: Can the $1,985 client pays via deductions from his CalPERS retirement benefit be deducted as self-employed health insurance on F-1040, Line 29?
Added comments: (1) CalPERS is not the client's former employer, per se. Rather, it is the pension payout arm of the State of California. Accordingly, the insurance is not, technically, being provided by client's former employer. (I'm sure some would laugh at this fine distinction, and I wouldn't blame them.) (2) For the SEHI deduction to be valid the policy must be established in the business name or in the name of its owner. I would speculate that the only thing in the taxpayer's name with regard to this policy is his name on an ID card. Surely the plan itself is between Blue Shield and CalPERS, and my client is just one of many thousands of covered insureds.
So what say you? Deductible, or not? As always, authoritative cites would be appreciated.
Question: Can the $1,985 client pays via deductions from his CalPERS retirement benefit be deducted as self-employed health insurance on F-1040, Line 29?
Added comments: (1) CalPERS is not the client's former employer, per se. Rather, it is the pension payout arm of the State of California. Accordingly, the insurance is not, technically, being provided by client's former employer. (I'm sure some would laugh at this fine distinction, and I wouldn't blame them.) (2) For the SEHI deduction to be valid the policy must be established in the business name or in the name of its owner. I would speculate that the only thing in the taxpayer's name with regard to this policy is his name on an ID card. Surely the plan itself is between Blue Shield and CalPERS, and my client is just one of many thousands of covered insureds.
So what say you? Deductible, or not? As always, authoritative cites would be appreciated.
Comment