Health Savings Accounts
by Chris Cooper
Most people with health insurance, especially employer paid health
insurance, really dont know what their health care costs are.
Furthermore, in many cases, they are limited in which health providers
(doctors, hospitals, pharmacies etc) they can use.
Most people are locked into a network of doctors. They know what the
co-pay is, but have no idea what the doctor actually charges.
When insured consumers are hospitalized, they rarely see the bill.
They dont know if the insurance company was overcharged or not.
There are firms that audit hospital bills for insurers and self insured
companies. They get paid a percentage of what they save on the bill
payer by finding overcharges, duplicate charges and the like. The last
I heard these firms were still making lots of money.
Overcharging, whether deliberate or not, by doctors and hospitals drive
up health care costs for all. (So do malpractice suits, but thats
another story.)
In order to give consumers more direct control not only over their
health costs, but in the choice of which doctor they can see or which
hospital they can enter, Congress enacted the Health Savings Account
Availability Act. As of the beginning of 2004, individuals who are not
otherwise insured can have Health Savings Accounts (HSA) , which carry
with them some very attractive tax benefits.
An individual can set up an HSA for himself or his family. An employer
can add an HSA option to the so-called cafeteria benefit plan it may
already offer.
The money put into the plan is before taxes, including Social Security,
if part of an employer plan. Otherwise it is a above-the-line deduction,
meaning you dont have to itemize your deductions to get the tax
break and that the deduction is not subject to the phase-out rules that
make many itemized deductions unavailable to high wage earners.
The plan is set up like an IRA. A trustee approved by the IRS must
be used. Money put in the plan grows tax free and funds withdrawn for
qualified medical expenses are also tax free. Unlike the older Flexible
Savings Accounts offered in employer cafeteria plans, you dont
have to spend the money put into the account by year end or otherwise
lose whatevers left. Money can be rolled over from year to year.
This can allow for a nice chunk of money to accumulate that can be withdraw
tax free at age 65.
In order to qualify, the individual or family must purchase a high
deducible health insurance policy. These are special policies that have
a minimum deductible of $1000 to a maximum of $5000 for an individual
and $2000 to $10,000 for a family. The higher the deductible, the lower
the premium.
Individuals can deduct the lesser of $2250 or the deductible on the
policy: for married couples or families it is double that. If over 55,
the deduction is $600 higher for individual and $1200 higher for couples
and will continue to rise at $100 a year until 2009, where it will be
capped at $1000 for individuals and $2000 for families.
The money in the HSA cannot be used to pay the premiums for this policy
except in certain circumstances (basically when youre unemployed).
It is meant to meet the deductible, co-pays, drug costs, eyeglasses
or any other medical expense that could be itemized on an individual
tax return as a medical expense.
Money withdrawn in excess of qualified medical expenses is taxed as
income and subject to a 10% penalty, unless the owner is disabled or
over 65. Any money in the account at death is added to the taxable estate.
There are no income limits on this plan. If started early, when you
are still young and healthy a substantial amount of money could accumulate
to either meet higher medical costs as you get older or to use to supplement
your income.
It pays to compare the costs of this plan with whatever your insurance
you have now. It might turn out that your employers plan is still
cheaper and you might want to keep it. Or you might want to consider
HSAs for their portability (you carry it from job to job without
cost or loss of any contributions) and the tax benefit of having another
vehicle to shelter income and capital growth, while giving you more
control over the cost and quality of your health care.
About the Author
Chris Cooper is a retired attorney who has spent several periods of
his life deep in debt. At http://www.credit-yourself.com
he tries to pass on some of the knowledge he picked up in his journey
to become debt free.