Florida real estate brokerages have a distinctive organizational structure that creates unique health insurance planning challenges. The broker of record — the licensed broker who holds the brokerage license — is typically a W-2 employee (or owner-employee) of the business entity. Full-time administrative staff (transaction coordinators, listing coordinators, marketing managers, office administrators) are also typically W-2 employees. Licensed sales agents, however, are almost universally classified as 1099 independent contractors, not W-2 employees, under IRS Revenue Ruling 87-41 and the Florida Real Estate Commission's independent contractor framework.
This structure means a Miami real estate brokerage with 12 "people" may have only 2–3 W-2 employees — the broker-owner and 1–2 admin staff. The other 9–10 licensed agents are 1099 contractors. Group health plans in Florida cover W-2 employees only, so the practical group plan universe for most independent brokerages is small. Miami's real estate market is one of the nation's most active — Brickell's luxury condo towers, Wynwood's commercial development, and South Beach's vacation rental market generate consistent transaction volume requiring experienced licensed brokers and admin support staff.
A Miami real estate broker who is the sole owner of a sole proprietorship or single-member LLC can deduct health insurance premiums paid for themselves, their spouse, and dependents via the self-employed health insurance deduction on Schedule 1 (Line 17) of Form 1040. This above-the-line deduction reduces adjusted gross income without itemizing. The deduction is limited to the business's net income from self-employment — it cannot exceed what the business earned in a year.
Many Miami real estate brokers structure their business as an S-corporation for the pass-through income tax advantage and employment tax savings on distributions. S-corp owners who receive health insurance premiums paid by the corporation must include those premiums in their W-2 Box 1 wages (but not Box 3/5 FICA). The owner then claims the self-employed health insurance deduction on Schedule 1. This two-step process is required by IRS Notice 2008-1 — work with a CPA familiar with S-corp health benefit treatment.
Real estate broker-owners who are self-employed or operate as pass-through entities may shop Miami-Dade County ACA marketplace plans individually if they do not offer a group plan. Miami-Dade County marketplace carriers include Florida Blue, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, and Aetna. If the broker has a spouse employed full-time elsewhere with access to employer-sponsored coverage, the broker may not be eligible for marketplace premium tax credits.
For the 1–3 W-2 administrative staff at a typical Miami real estate brokerage, the broker-owner has two main options: a group health plan or ICHRA.
If the brokerage has 2+ W-2 employees (including the owner) and meets Florida's 70% participation requirement, a small group plan through Florida Blue, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, and Aetna provides structured benefits with defined employer-employee cost sharing. Group plan advantages: guaranteed-issue enrollment, no individual underwriting, employer premium contributions are deductible business expenses. Miami-Dade County's primary hospital networks include Jackson Health System, Baptist Health South Florida, and Cleveland Clinic Florida (Coral Gables). Florida Blue group plans have broad Miami-Dade network access including Jackson Memorial and Baptist.
ICHRA lets the brokerage set a monthly reimbursement amount (e.g., $450/month) that W-2 employees use to purchase their own Miami-Dade County ACA marketplace plans. Each employee chooses the plan that fits their personal providers and coverage preferences. ICHRA is particularly well-suited for Miami brokerages where admin staff have diverse healthcare needs or where the broker-owner doesn't want to be locked into a single group plan carrier's network.
Florida's 1099 real estate agents are self-employed for health insurance purposes. They can purchase individual ACA marketplace plans through HealthCare.gov, potentially qualify for premium tax credits based on their net income, or contribute to their own HSA if they choose an HSA-eligible high-deductible plan. The brokerage owner cannot provide 1099 agents with group plan enrollment — but they can provide informal guidance about marketplace options or set up informational sessions about ACA marketplace plans as a value-added service for their agent community.
A licensed Florida agent will compare group plan and ICHRA options for your Miami real estate brokerage at no cost.
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Related: Florida Small Business Health Insurance Florida ACA Guide Get Florida Coverage