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Tax
Benefits of Health Savings Accounts
By
Fred
Adams
Vice President- HSA
for America
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Health
Savings Accounts are helping individuals and families save
thousands of dollars on their income taxes. These tax-favored
accounts, which have only been available since January of
2004, can be opened by anyone with a qualifying high-deductible
health insurance plan. Once you open an account, you
can place tax-deductible contributions into it, which can
then be used later to pay medical expenses. Any money
not used grows tax-deferred, like an IRA.
Since
they first became available in the beginning of 2004, HSA's
have rapidly gained popularity, particularly among individuals
and small businesses. Here are 10 ways an HSA can offer
tax advantages over traditional health insurance arrangements:
- Reduce
your federal income taxes. Regardless of how your
income was earned, any money you deposit into your Health
Savings Account is considered an "above-the-line"
deduction, giving you a 100% write-off against adjusted
gross income.
-
Reduce your adjusted gross income, helping you to qualify
for other lucrative tax breaks tied to overall income.
By reducing your adjusted gross income, you may also qualify
for additional tax breaks. For instance, the child
tax credit of $1,000 begins to be phased out once
a family's adjusted gross income exceeds $110,000.
Keep your AGI below this number, and you maintain the full
$1,000 tax credit per child.
- Reduce
your state income taxes. Federal adjusted gross
income is also the starting point for most state tax assessments,
so saving on your state income tax bill is possible as well.
Find detailed information on our state
income tax page.
- Tax-deferred
growth. Like funds in an IRA, the money in your account
grows free from federal taxes. You do have to pay
taxes if the money is withdrawn for non-medical expenses,
but there is no penalty if you are over 65 years old.
- Pay
for dental expenses with pre-tax dollars. Dental
expenses from checkups and cleanings, to braces, to toothpaste,
can all be paid for with pre-tax dollars from your HSA account.
You may even purchase prepaid dental plans with funds from
your HSA account. See our Low
cost dental plans.
- Pay
for vision care with pre-tax dollars. You can
use HSA funds to pay for checkups, glasses, contact lenses,
prescription sunglasses, cleaning fluids, and other expenses
related to your eye care.
- Pay
for alternative care with pre-tax dollars. Health
insurance doesn't typically pay for treatments like chiropractic,
acupuncture, homeopathy, ayurvedic medicine, herbal medicine,
various forms of "energy" healing, faith healing,
or any number of other so-called alternative treatments.
One of the advantages of Health Savings Accounts is that
the individual consumer has the right to choose their source
of medical care, instead of that decision being made by
an insurance company or HMO. Therefore, there are
very few restrictions on the type of treatment you choose.
- Pay
for aspirin, bandages, cold medicine, and other household
medical expenses with pre-tax dollars. Virtually
all expenses related to the treatment or prevention of a
medical condition can be paid from your Health Savings Account.
View the list of HSA qualified
expenses.
- Pay
Medicare expenses with pre-tax dollars. When you
enroll in Medicare, you can use your account to pay Medicare
premiums, deductibles, copays, and coinsurance under any
part of Medicare. If you have retiree health benefits
through a former employer, you can also use your HSA to
pay for your share of retiree medical insurance premiums.
The one expense you cannot use your account for is to purchase
a Medicare supplemental insurance or "Medigap"
policy.
- Pay
for long-term care insurance with pre-tax dollars.
Long-term care premiums can be paid for from your HSA, up
to $260 for those under age 40, $490 if you're
between 41 and 50 years, and up to $2,600 if you're
61 years or older. Find out more about long
term care insurance.
A Health
Savings Account (HSA) enables anyone with a qualifying
high-deductible health insurance plan
to shelter up to $5,450 from federal income taxes.
By reducing your adjustable gross income, enabling you to
pay for medical expenses with pre-tax income, and through
tax-deferred growth, HSAs can reduce your income taxes.
More information
about how HSAs work, along with instant quotes on qualifying
high-deductible health plans, can be found at:
HSA
for America
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