Mental Health Benefits: Coverage Requirements and Access
Federal parity law, employer plan design, and state-level mandates collectively determine what mental health services an insured person can access — and at what cost. This page describes the regulatory framework governing mental health benefits in the United States, the mechanisms through which coverage operates, the scenarios most commonly encountered by enrollees and plan administrators, and the boundaries that determine eligibility and scope. For a broader orientation to the benefits landscape, the National Benefits Authority provides reference coverage across the full spectrum of public and private benefit programs.
Definition and scope
Mental health benefits are coverage provisions within health insurance plans that pay for the diagnosis, treatment, and ongoing management of mental health conditions and substance use disorders. The governing federal statute is the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 (MHPAEA), which prohibits group health plans and health insurance issuers from imposing treatment limitations or financial requirements on mental health and substance use disorder benefits that are more restrictive than those applied to medical and surgical benefits.
MHPAEA applies to employer-sponsored group health plans with 50 or more employees, individual and group insurance markets under the Affordable Care Act, and Medicaid managed care organizations. The law does not require plans to cover mental health services — it requires that when such coverage exists, it must be offered on parity with comparable medical coverage.
Health insurance benefits structured under the ACA must include mental health and substance use disorder services as one of ten essential health benefits, meaning individual and small group market plans are required to provide this coverage by default. Large group and self-funded employer plans are not subject to the essential health benefits mandate but remain bound by MHPAEA parity standards.
How it works
Mental health coverage operates through two distinct plan structures: insured plans and self-funded plans.
Insured plans are underwritten by an insurance carrier and regulated primarily by state insurance commissioners. These plans must comply with both MHPAEA and applicable state mental health mandates, which in many states exceed federal minimums. As of the 2023 MHPAEA Proposed Rule, the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Treasury have moved to strengthen enforcement of nonquantitative treatment limitations (NQTLs) — restrictions like prior authorization, step therapy, and network composition that are not expressed as simple numeric limits.
Self-funded plans are administered directly by employers, funded from company assets, and governed exclusively by ERISA rather than state insurance law. These plans are subject to MHPAEA but are exempt from state benefit mandates, creating a two-tier compliance environment.
Key parity requirements include:
- Financial requirements — Deductibles, copayments, coinsurance, and out-of-pocket maximums for mental health benefits cannot be more restrictive than the predominant level applied to medical/surgical benefits within the same classification.
- Quantitative treatment limitations — Day or visit limits on inpatient mental health stays or outpatient therapy sessions must not be lower than comparable limits on medical benefits.
- Nonquantitative treatment limitations — Criteria for prior authorization, standards for provider reimbursement, and network adequacy requirements must be applied no more stringently to mental health benefits than to medical benefits.
The Department of Labor's Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) is the primary federal enforcement body for MHPAEA compliance in employer-sponsored plans. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) enforces parity in Medicaid benefits and Medicare benefits managed care.
Common scenarios
Employer-sponsored coverage: An employee enrolled in a group health plan seeks outpatient psychotherapy. Under MHPAEA, the plan cannot require prior authorization for mental health visits if it does not require prior authorization for comparable outpatient specialist visits. If a plan imposes a 20-session annual cap on therapy but places no comparable cap on physical therapy, the cap violates parity. Employees who believe a plan has violated parity rules may file complaints with the Department of Labor at dol.gov/ebsa.
ACA marketplace plans: An individual purchasing coverage through Healthcare.gov selects a silver-tier plan. The plan is required under 45 CFR §156.115 to include mental health and substance use disorder services as an essential health benefit. The specific services covered — including inpatient psychiatric care, outpatient counseling, and medication-assisted treatment — are defined by each state's benchmark plan.
Medicaid: Low-income enrollees in Medicaid managed care receive mental health services subject to both MHPAEA and the federal Medicaid Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment (EPSDT) requirement for individuals under age 21. EPSDT mandates coverage of any medically necessary service, which has been interpreted by CMS to include behavioral health services even when not explicitly listed in a state plan. This intersects directly with benefits for low-income individuals and benefits for families with children.
Continuation coverage: Individuals maintaining coverage through COBRA benefits after leaving employment retain the same mental health benefits held under the prior group plan, subject to the same parity protections.
Decision boundaries
Several threshold determinations govern whether and how mental health benefits apply in a given situation:
- Plan type: ERISA self-funded vs. insured determines whether state mandates apply. This distinction affects which conditions are covered and what appeal rights exist. See benefits appeals and disputes for procedural options.
- Group size: Plans covering fewer than 50 employees are exempt from MHPAEA under the small employer exception. These enrollees may have fewer guaranteed protections.
- ACA vs. non-ACA plans: Grandfathered health plans — those continuously in existence since March 23, 2010 without significant changes — are exempt from the essential health benefits requirement but not from MHPAEA's parity mandate.
- Out-of-network parity: MHPAEA requires parity in out-of-network benefits if a plan provides any out-of-network mental health coverage. Plans that exclude out-of-network mental health coverage entirely while providing out-of-network medical benefits may violate this requirement.
- Employee Assistance Programs: Standalone employee assistance programs that provide a limited number of counseling sessions are generally exempt from MHPAEA if they do not provide significant benefits in the nature of medical care. EAPs that integrate with the primary health plan trigger parity obligations.
For enrollees navigating benefits eligibility requirements or plan coordination, the interaction between mental health coverage and health savings accounts or flexible spending accounts adds a tax dimension: qualified mental health expenses paid to licensed mental health providers are generally eligible for reimbursement under both account types under IRS Publication 502.
References
- Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) — U.S. Department of Labor
- MHPAEA Proposed Rule (2023) — Federal Register, 88 FR 47740
- Essential Health Benefits — Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
- EBSA Mental Health Parity Enforcement — U.S. Department of Labor
- Medicaid Mental Health Parity — Medicaid.gov
- IRS Publication 502: Medical and Dental Expenses
- EPSDT — Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment — Medicaid.gov