Karl
Klinger, CFP®,
CLU®Fall is approaching, which means for many workers that open
enrollment is coming. Open enrollment is a specified time period during
which companies let their employees sign up for various health and
retirement savings benefits as well as smaller benefit options that may
be unique to a company.
One of those options might be a Health Savings Account, also known as an
HSA. Health Savings Accounts were created as part of the Medicare
Modernization Act of 2003. Anyone under age 65 who buys a
qualified high-deductible health plan (HDHP) can open an HAS.
However, you can still own an HSA and be covered under other types of
insurance policies that cover liability, dental, vision and long-term
care needs.
Why are companies offering these plans? Because a high-deductible health
plan option allows the company to save money while giving their
employees a shot at lower or stable monthly individual and family
premiums. And it's important to know that in 2007, the contribution
rules on these plans changed. Previously, the maximum contribution was
calculated as the lesser of the deductible of the high-deductible health
plan or a specific indexed amount. Now, the limit is the maximum annual
contribution alone.
What's the big advantage to choosing one? Contributions are made to HSAs
on a pretax basis where they are allowed to grow tax-deferred and spent
on a tax-free basis for medical expenses. HSA contributions could be
made through a company's cafeteria plan if allowed by the company's
cafeteria plan document, and can potentially save FICA/Medicare taxes on
the contribution along with federal and state taxes.
Yet there are some critical things to know before you make the switch:
Get some individual financial advice first: The enticement of
potentially lower or more stable health insurance premium increases may
lead you to jump immediately, but it makes sense to speak to your tax
professional as well as a Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional about how an HSA should fit into your overall financial strategy.
Understand your HSA limits: The following cover the 2009 maximum
contributions you can place in an HSA and the minimum and maximum
out-of-pocket amounts for an HDHP insurance plan:
Maximum HSA contribution: $3,000 for individual, $5,950 for families
Minimum HDHP deductible: $1,150 self-only coverage, $2,300 family coverage
Annual out-of-pocket maximum: $5,800 self-only coverage, $11,600 family coverage
If you are 55 or older and your HDHP is in effect, you are eligible to deposit catch-up contributions, and in 2009, the additional amount is $1,000.
Know the difference between an HSA and a medical flexible spending
account (FSA): One important difference is that HSAs allow balances
to be rolled over from year-to-year, growing on a tax-free basis as long
as they're used for medical expenses. On the other hand, Medical FSAs
require that the money you contribute each year to be spent by year-end
(or a brief grace period if provided by the plan) or you'll lose it. But
in certain cases, such as when you incur medical expenses early in a
year, you can be reimbursed by your FSA without having to fully fund it
first -- so FSAs might be a bit more flexible in this regard. Get help
from your tax or human resources professional.
Know whether you can have both: In some situations, you may be
able to have both an HSA and an FSA. If your FSA provides for limited
reimbursement for items not covered by your health insurance plan (such
as dental, vision or wellness care), you can use an HSA for items
covered by your plan and your FSA for medical expenses that are not.
Obviously, double-check this with an expert.
Know penalties for non-medical withdrawals: You'll get hit with
a 10 percent penalty, plus any withdrawals will be taxed at ordinary
income tax rates. After age 65, you're free to use the funds for any
purpose without penalty, but non-medical withdrawals are still taxable.
You may actually use an IRA to fund an HSA on a one-time basis:
The rules let individuals roll over money from an IRA once so people can
use the money tax-free for medical expenses, but the amount of the
rollover is limited to the HSA maximum contribution for the year minus
any contributions already made.
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This article was
produced by The Financial Planning Association.
200809 2008-3963 |