Minnesota LLC Health Insurance Guide
Complete 2026 guide to health insurance for Minnesota LLC owners — coverage options, tax deductions, QSEHRA for small teams, and finding affordable plans.
Your 4 Coverage Options
Minnesota Marketplace
Healthcare.gov or state exchange. Premium tax credits based on income. Open Enrollment Nov 1 - Jan 15 or qualifying life event.
Spouse's employer plan
Usually cheapest option if available. Check enrollment rules — changes typically require qualifying life event.
Private off-exchange
Direct from insurer. No premium tax credit. Sometimes better networks or plan options. Compare with exchange options.
QSEHRA (with employees)
Reimburse employees tax-free for individual plans. $6,350 self-only / $12,800 family limit. Alternative to group plan for small LLCs.
Tax Deduction Rules by Entity Type
Single-member LLC (disregarded entity)
Pay premiums personally. Deduct on Schedule 1 (Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction). Limited to business net profit.
Multi-member LLC (partnership)
Premiums paid by LLC treated as guaranteed payments or distributions. Each member claims on their personal Schedule 1.
S-Corp LLC
More than 2% shareholders: LLC pays premiums, adds to W-2 Box 1 (income). Owner-employee deducts on Schedule 1. Net neutral tax effect.
C-Corp LLC
LLC pays premiums as deductible expense. Not taxable to owner-employee. Best tax treatment (but C-Corp rare for small business).
FAQ
How does a Minnesota LLC owner get health insurance?
Four paths: (1) Minnesota Marketplace (healthcare.gov or state exchange) with potential premium tax credits. (2) Spouse's employer plan. (3) Private off-exchange individual plan. (4) SHOP marketplace for small businesses with employees. Self-employed LLC owners pay premiums personally but can deduct them on Schedule 1 of Form 1040.
Can I deduct health insurance premiums from my Minnesota LLC taxes?
Yes — self-employed health insurance deduction on Schedule 1 (Form 1040). Covers premiums for you, spouse, and dependents. Deduction limited to business net profit (can't create a loss). For S-Corp owners: premiums paid by S-Corp must be added to W-2 Box 1 (income), then deducted on Schedule 1 — net neutral.
What's QSEHRA and should my Minnesota LLC offer it?
Qualified Small Employer Health Reimbursement Arrangement — lets small LLCs (under 50 employees, no group plan) reimburse employees tax-free for individual health insurance + medical expenses. 2026 limits: $6,350/yr self-only, $12,800/yr family. Reimbursements are tax-free to employees, deductible to the LLC, no payroll tax. Must be offered equally to all eligible employees.
Can my Minnesota LLC pay for my health insurance premiums?
Default LLC (disregarded entity or partnership): premiums paid by the LLC are treated as owner distributions, not deductible business expenses. Better: pay personally and claim Schedule 1 deduction. S-Corp: LLC can pay directly, added to W-2 as taxable income, then deducted on personal return. Net result is similar but paperwork differs.
Are there Minnesota-specific health insurance programs for small business owners?
Minnesota participates in federal Marketplace (healthcare.gov) or operates its own exchange. Some states offer small business health insurance programs or tax credits. Check Minnesota Department of Insurance or the state exchange for local options. State Medicaid expansion eligibility also varies — check income thresholds.
What's the cheapest health insurance for a Minnesota LLC owner?
Healthcare.gov / Minnesota Marketplace during Open Enrollment (Nov 1 - Jan 15). Silver-level plans with premium tax credits (based on AGI) often run $100-$500/mo. Bronze plans have lower premiums but higher deductibles. Short-term plans ($100-$300/mo) are an option for healthy individuals but lack ACA protections. Compare carefully.