Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle K— - Group Health Plan Requirements › Chapter CHAPTER 100— - GROUP HEALTH PLAN REQUIREMENTS › Subchapter Subchapter A— - Requirements Relating to Portability, Access, and Renewability › § 9802
Stops group health plans from making people ineligible or charging them more because of health reasons. Plans cannot base who can sign up (or keep coverage) or how much a person pays on things like health status, medical conditions, past claims, getting care, medical history, genetic information, proof of insurability (including effects of domestic violence), or disability. Waiting periods are treated as part of those enrollment rules. Plans still only have to give the benefits they promise and may set the same limits or rules for people in similar situations. A plan cannot raise a person’s share of premiums for those reasons. Plans also may not use genetic information to set group premiums, though a plan can raise an employer’s cost if a covered person actually develops a disease (but it cannot treat that as genetic information about others to raise costs further). Plans must not ask or force anyone to take a genetic test. A doctor can ask a patient to take one. Plans may use genetic test results only when needed to make payment decisions and only the smallest amount of data required. Plans may ask (but not force) people to join approved research tests if joining is voluntary, will not affect enrollment or cost, the results won’t be used to decide coverage or price, and the plan tells the federal government in writing and follows extra rules. If genetic data is picked up by accident while getting other information, that is allowed so long as the plan is not using it to decide coverage or price. Church plans may require proof of good health only for employers with 10 or fewer employees or for people who enroll after the first 90 days. Definitions: “Group health plan” means health coverage for a group (like an employer plan). “Genetic information” includes genetic test results and also genetic data about a fetus or an embryo.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 9802
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73