The question on the page before you see that you had a “lapse” in coverage is causing the issue.
On the previous page you should see the question, “What type of High Deductible Health Plan did [spouse] have on December 1, 2016?”. The choices are Family, Self only, or None.
If you have been covered under your husband’s family plan, you might think you should answer Family to the question. However, the answer should be None.
It is referring to what type of plan you held in your name on December 1, 2016. If you had your own separate HDHP on that date, then choose the type of plan that you had. If instead you were covered under the plan in your husband’s name, then you should choose None.
The question on the page before you see that you had a “lapse” in coverage is causing the issue.
On the previous page you should see the question, “What type of High Deductible Health Plan did [spouse] have on December 1, 2016?”. The choices are Family, Self only, or None.
If you have been covered under your husband’s family plan, you might think you should answer Family to the question. However, the answer should be None.
It is referring to what type of plan you held in your name on December 1, 2016. If you had your own separate HDHP on that date, then choose the type of plan that you had. If instead you were covered under the plan in your husband’s name, then you should choose None.
My wife has her and the children on her HDHP, while I am on my own HDHP, when I select Self on that option it still thinks I have a lapse in coverage.
Did you ever figure this out? I am having the same issue.
Me too. Saying my husband has a lapse, but there was not. We each have our own HDHP. Chose self only for both, and his is saying that there is a lapse. I have both 1095-B forms to prove that we both had no lapse.
this is BS...there is no fix that removes the lapse assumption...i don't care how many times you "edit" anything...the only thing that stops this nonsense is selecting "None" which is the completely incorrect answer for the situation where both Spouses have Self Only. Fix your **bleep** software [removed]! If the IRS comes banging on my door from this then there will be [removed] to pay.
I had selected Family for my spouse because she was covered under the high deductible family plan from my work. I changed it to none (meaning she did not have a separate plan), and it seems to have fixed the issue. The question should definitely be reworded. "Did your spouse have a separate High Deductible Insurance plan?"