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California Penalty for Not Having Health Insurance

California has an individual mandate penalty. If you don’t have health insurance for several months, you will have to pay penalty when you file your California income tax return. The flat rate penalty of $900 per adult, or $450 for a child is not too bad. However, if you fall into the penalty bracket of 2.5 percent of your household income, that amount can sting.

California Penalty for no health insurance.

From the California Franchise Tax Board website:

Individual mandate penalty is calculated by the California Franchise Tax Board.

Beginning January 1, 2020, all California residents must either:

  1. Have qualifying health insurance coverage
  2. Obtain an exemption from the requirement to have coverage
  3. Pay a penalty when they file their state tax return

To avoid a penalty, you will need qualifying health coverage for each month beginning on January 1, 2020 for:

Many people already have qualifying health insurance coverage through:

  1. Employer-sponsored plans
  2. Coverage purchased through Covered California or directly from insurers
  3. Medicare
  4. Most Medi-Cal

For information about other exemptions that may apply, see the exemption list.

Use this tool to estimate the penalty you may owe. Use Form 3853 to get an accurate penalty amount.

Flat rate or percentage of household income.

Calculating California Individual Mandate Penalty

The penalty is the higher of the flat rate amount or the income percentage. With the income, California takes your income and subtracts the filing threshold dollar amount. They then multiply the remainder by 2.5 percent. If the percentage amount is greater than the flat amount, that is the amount that is added to the income tax return as a penalty.

Family Penalty Estimator

Penalty for a family of four using the penalty estimator tool.

The penalty estimator is fairly straight forward to use. In this example, the dates of birth are entered for the adults, 2 dependents are noted, and the estimated income amount is entered.

At $130,000, the 2025 penalty for a family of 4 is $2,700.

This family of four, if they have no health insurance for the full year (2025) will be levied a penalty of $2,700.

Partial Year Coverage Penalty

Partial year coverage, less than 12 months.

Within the penalty estimator, you can indicate which months you did not have creditable health insurance coverage. In this scenario the family only had health insurance for half of the year.

The family of four with coverage for only six has a penalty of $1,350 for no coverage for the other six months.

The penalty for only having health insurance for six months is $1,350.

There are a variety of reasons California will grant you an exemption from having health insurance and not incur a penalty.

There are several conditions that preempt any penalty such as an income below the filing threshold. For some exemptions, you must contact Covered California. They will examine your situation and if you meet the conditions, issue you an Exemption Control Number. The ECN allows you to enroll in a Minimum Coverage plan if you are over 30 years of age.

YouTube video of the California Health Insurance Penalty


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