How to Apply the Rate of Pay Safe Harbor
The rate of pay safe harbor is one of three IRS-approved methods that Applicable Large Employers (ALEs) may use to demonstrate that a health plan offer meets the ACA affordability standard without knowing each employee's actual household income. This page covers how the safe harbor is defined under IRS regulations, the mechanics of the calculation, the scenarios where it applies most reliably, and the boundaries where a different safe harbor may be preferable. Understanding these rules is essential for employers navigating the regulatory context for ACA compliance obligations under Internal Revenue Code §4980H.
Definition and scope
The rate of pay safe harbor is established under IRS Final Regulations on the Employer Shared Responsibility Provisions (26 CFR §54.4980H-5(e)(2)) and further explained in IRS Revenue Procedure 2014-37 and annually updated revenue procedures that set the applicable affordability percentage. Under this method, affordability is determined not by what an employee actually earns, but by what the employee's hourly or monthly rate of pay implies they would earn if working a fixed assumed schedule.
The safe harbor applies to two distinct employee categories:
- Hourly employees — affordability is tested against the employee's hourly rate multiplied by 130 hours per month (the ACA's statutory definition of full-time, per 26 U.S.C. §4980H(c)(4)).
- Non-hourly (salaried) employees — affordability is tested against the employee's monthly salary.
The scope is national. Any ALE subject to the employer mandate — meaning an employer with 50 or more full-time equivalent employees — may elect this safe harbor on a class-by-class basis. An employer may apply the rate of pay safe harbor to one group of employees and a different safe harbor (W-2 or federal poverty line) to another group, provided the classification is reasonable and consistent.
How it works
The rate of pay safe harbor produces a calculated monthly income figure that stands in for actual household income in the affordability test. The affordability percentage is set annually by the IRS; for plan years beginning in 2024, IRS Revenue Procedure 2023-29 set that threshold at 8.39% of household income.
Calculation for hourly employees — 4 steps:
- Identify the employee's hourly rate of pay as of the first day of the coverage period (or the first day of the plan year, for ongoing employees).
- Multiply that hourly rate by 130 hours to produce a deemed monthly wage. For example, an employee earning $15.00 per hour yields a deemed monthly wage of $1,950.
- Multiply the deemed monthly wage by the applicable affordability percentage (8.39% for 2024) to find the maximum employee-share premium that preserves affordability: $1,950 × 0.0839 = $163.61 per month.
- Confirm that the employee's required contribution for the lowest-cost, self-only, minimum-value plan does not exceed that figure.
Calculation for non-hourly employees:
The monthly salary figure replaces the 130-hour construct. If a salaried employee earns $3,500 per month, the affordability ceiling at 8.39% is $3,500 × 0.0839 = $293.65 per month.
Critically, the IRS permits employers to use the lowest hourly rate in effect during the calendar month if an employee's rate varies within a pay period. This conservative floor protects the employer against a mid-period rate reduction making the plan retroactively unaffordable. Rate of pay must not be reduced specifically to manipulate the safe harbor calculation — the IRS flags such reductions as disqualifying (IRS Publication on ESRP).
Common scenarios
Scenario 1 — Stable hourly workforce. A regional retailer employs 200 hourly associates at wages ranging from $14.00 to $22.00 per hour. Because the rate is fixed and verifiable from payroll records, the rate of pay safe harbor calculation is straightforward and produces a consistent affordability ceiling for each employee without requiring W-2 data from the prior year.
Scenario 2 — Commissioned or variable-pay employees. An employer pays a base hourly rate plus commission. The rate of pay safe harbor applies only to the base hourly rate; commission is excluded from the calculation. This can make the safe harbor more protective than W-2 Safe Harbor for employees who earn substantial commissions, since total W-2 wages would be higher and would therefore demand a lower premium ceiling to remain affordable. Employers should compare both methods when compensation is hybrid. The W-2 safe harbor operates differently and may produce either a higher or lower affordability ceiling depending on total annual compensation.
Scenario 3 — Mid-year hire with a set hourly rate. A new employee begins work on June 1 at $18.00 per hour. The deemed monthly wage is $18.00 × 130 = $2,340. At 8.39%, the premium ceiling is $196.33 per month. Because the calculation anchors to the rate on the first day of coverage — not the end of the year — the employer has immediate certainty about affordability without waiting for annual W-2 issuance.
Scenario 4 — Employees who reduce hours voluntarily. The rate of pay safe harbor is not affected by how many hours an employee actually works in a given month; it uses the fixed hourly rate multiplied by the statutory 130-hour assumption. An employee who works only 80 hours in a month does not alter the employer's safe harbor calculation.
Decision boundaries
The rate of pay safe harbor is not universally optimal. Several boundaries determine when it is superior — or inferior — to the alternatives described in the affordability safe harbors framework.
| Factor | Rate of Pay Safe Harbor | W-2 Safe Harbor | Federal Poverty Line Safe Harbor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Data required | Current hourly rate or monthly salary | Prior-year Box 1 W-2 wages | None beyond plan year |
| Best for | Stable hourly or salaried workforces | High-earner salaried groups | Lowest-cost certainty at scale |
| Risk if wages fall | Recalculate using lowest rate | No intra-year risk | No intra-year risk |
| Applies to non-hourly? | Yes (monthly salary basis) | Yes | Yes |
| Interaction with tips/commissions | Excludes variable pay | Includes all Box 1 income | No income interaction |
Key decision rules:
- The rate of pay safe harbor cannot be used if an employee's hourly rate was reduced during the month in a way that appears designed to game the affordability calculation. The IRS disqualifies safe harbor treatment in that circumstance.
- Employers with tipped employees should evaluate whether the base wage alone — without tip income — produces a feasible premium ceiling. If the resulting ceiling is very low, the federal poverty line safe harbor may be administratively simpler.
- For salaried employees who receive large year-end bonuses, the W-2 method may be unfavorable (high Box 1 income drives a lower premium ceiling). The rate of pay method, anchored to monthly salary, avoids that distortion.
- Employers should document the safe harbor election method used for each class of employees and retain that documentation. IRS Letter 226-J penalty assessments — described at /index — frequently hinge on whether an employer can produce contemporaneous records showing the affordability method applied and the data supporting it.
- The rate of pay safe harbor does not eliminate minimum value requirements. Affordability and minimum value are independent thresholds; a plan must satisfy both to avoid §4980H(b) penalty exposure (26 U.S.C. §4980H(b)).
References
- 26 CFR §54.4980H-5 — Employer Shared Responsibility, Affordability
- 26 U.S.C. §4980H — Employer Shared Responsibility Provisions
- IRS Revenue Procedure 2023-29 — 2024 Affordability Percentage
- IRS Revenue Procedure 2014-37 — Safe Harbor Methods
- IRS — Employer Shared Responsibility Provisions (ESRP) Overview
- IRS — Questions and Answers on Employer Shared Responsibility Provisions Under the ACA
The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)