Yes, COBRA notices can be emailed instead of mailed, but only if strict conditions are met.
Here's the official breakdown:
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Under federal COBRA rules (from ERISA and the DOL regulations), electronic delivery of COBRA notices is allowed if the employer/plan administrator follows the Department of Labor's (DOL) safe harbor guidelines for electronic communications.
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To email COBRA notices legally, you must ensure:
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The recipient (employee/former employee) uses email regularly as part of their job (if they are still employed), or
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The recipient affirmatively consents to receive COBRA communications electronically (if they are no longer an employee).
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The plan administrator must track and maintain evidence that the notice was actually sent and received.
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The email should include all the required COBRA notice content, and the recipient must have access to it in a way that's as easy as if it were paper-mailed.
In simpler terms:
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If the person is a current employee who uses email daily for work → Email is okay.
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If the person is a former employee → They must first consent to receiving notices by email.
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Without consent? You must mail it via USPS.
Why mailing is often still used:
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It's the safest way to prove compliance.
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If you mail the notice first class and document it properly, it's very hard for someone to claim they "never got it," which protects the employer from penalties.
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Emailing without proper consent or documentation can cause a COBRA violation — which can lead to fines up to $110/day per violation.
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