Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Comparing Savings Accounts
A savings account can be quite useful, especially for individuals who are attempting to build a good savings either for retirement or simply to have the money they need to cover any sudden expenses or unexpected occurrences. Regardless of your...

Maximize Cost Savings with Increased Efficiency
"The first rule of any technology used in a business is that automation applied to an efficient operation will magnify the efficiency. The second is that automation applied to an inefficient operation will magnify the inefficiency." - BILL GATES ...

Moneynet sounds alarm over poor-paying children's savings accounts
Interest rates on children's savings accounts – some of the most heavily marketed of all savings products – can leave kids badly out of pocket, online financial data service Moneynet warns today. In some cases, the difference in rates can be...

Save Online, Try The Online Savings Account
Savings account is account deposited that is only intended to stay in the bank for a relatively shorter time span. This account usually offers much lower interest rates than most bank accounts. But still, like many other accounts, it accumulates...

Ten Things You Should Know About Medical Savings Accounts
Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs) are promoted as the salvation of small businesses in desperate need of affordable health insurance plans. Forbes called MSAs "Super-IRAs" and Business Week wrote "almost too good to be true". Kiplinger's Personal...

 
Health Savings Accounts Mean Big Savings

Health Savings Accounts Can Mean Big Savings for Consumers

Concerned about the high cost of healthcare? Worried that your insurance doesn't cover all your costs? Fortunately, a partial solution may be just around the corner. Since January 2004, taxpayers have had a tax savings tool called Health Savings Accounts, or HSAs. These HSAs may solve many of your healthcare cost problems.

How an HSA Works

In a nutshell, HSAs work like this. You buy a specific type of major medical, or catastrophic coverage, insurance called a High Deductible Health Plan. (This special HSA-compatible insurance is also known by the acronym HDHP.) Then, you annually contribute up to roughly $5,100 for a family and up to $2,600 for an individual--to a special health savings account.

Mote that slightly higher deductions are available to taxpayers over the age of 55. Also, annual deductions are indexed for inflation.

How You Save Taxes with HSAs

HSAs work because you get a tax deduction for the money you contribute to the health savings account. However, as long you spend the money in the account for eligible healthcare expenses--pretty much anything reasonable--you aren't taxed when you withdraw the money. Note that HSAs deductions are not limited by taxpayer incomes.

In effect, the HSA makes all or most of your uncovered healthcare expenses fully deductible. This is a big deal because for most people, healthcare expenses are not deductible.

Just to put the value of an HSA into perspective, a family can save from $500 to as much as $1750 annually in income taxes by using one of these accounts. The final savings, predictably, depend on family income and the state where the family lives.

One other thing. Don't confuse HSAs with the old style Flexible Spending Accounts, or FSAs. With FSAs, you lost the money you didn't spend by the end of the year. With HSAs, you don't lose the money. The unused balance just carries forward to the next year.

Aren't Medical Expenses a Tax Deduction Anyway?

No, not really. For most people medical expenses are not a tax deduction. Here's why. Healthcare expenses do count as an itemized deduction for people who don't use the standard deduction. However, only the portions of one's healthcare costs that exceed 7.5% of adjusted gross income get deducted. That means that most people never get to use their healthcare costs as tax deductions because their healthcare costs don't cross the 7.5% threshold.

Another Benefit: HSAs May Also Save Premiums

HSAs sometimes produce another economic benefit. The HDHP insurance itself may save people money because they buy less insurance. This is especially true for people who aren't already using major medical insurance.

How to Set Up a Health Savings Account

HSA accounts aren't difficult to set up. Essentially, you do just two things. (1) Get medical insurance that qualifies as an HDHP, and (2) Open an HSA account with a bank that offers HSAs. Your current medical insurance provider is a good place to start your search for HDHP insurance. You can also check with your state's Blue Cross or Blue Shield insurer.

Three Warnings about HSAs

For what it's worth, I am now using an HSA myself. (I got my HDHP from Premera Blue Cross and use an HSA account from HSA Bank.) But let me also share three caveats: First, obviously, you never want to cancel one insurance policy until you're sure you have a replacement policy. Second, you do need to be careful about the fees associated with the HSA "bank account," so shop around. Third, if you withdraw money from an HSA for something other than a valid medical expense, the withdrawal is taxable and subject to a 10% penalty.



About the author:

Bellevue-Redmond CPA Stephen L. Nelson is the author of both Quicken for Dummies and QuickBooks for Dummies and an adjunct tax professor for Golden Gate University's graduate tax school.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.