Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Health benefit can help in retirement

No ‘use it or lose it’ requiremen­t for HSAs

- By Suzanne Woolley

THERE may soon be three more letters in your employer’s alphabet soup of benefit plans. Those letters are HSA, which stand for health savings account, which can bring tax advantages at a time when you could use them the most.

Financial planners get all googly-eyed when talking about these accounts, but not because they’re a way to save pretax money to pay current medical costs. Instead, they rave about them as a way to save money to use for future medical costs — after you’ve retired. The key to that appeal comes from three magic words: triple tax-free.

The number of HSA accounts increased 16 percent year over year as of June 30, surpassing 21 million, according to a survey by consulting firm Devenir. Assets held in HSAs rose 23 percent, to $42.7 billion.

As companies shift more health care costs onto employees via plans with high deductible­s, HSAs let workers put pretax dollars into savings accounts for medical expenses.

They’re similar to flexible spending plans but without the annual “use it or lose it” requiremen­t: Contributi­ons can roll over year after year. Any earnings increase tax-free, and the money isn’t taxed when used for qualified medical expenses.

People who don’t use direct deposit at their job can contribute to an HSA but must wait until tax time to get money back by claiming a deduction.

Next year, eligible workers can contribute up to $3,450 to an HSA for an individual and $6,900 for a family. Workers ages 55 and older can kick in an extra $1,000 annually, and your company might contribute too. In its poll of 100 top HSA providers, Devenir found employers give an average of $719 annually, for a total of 33 percent of all HSA dollars. Workers who contribute­d put in an average of $1,111 annually, with cash deposits far outweighin­g money put in any of the investment options that are also offered.

The popularity of HSAs comes as employees are getting better acquainted with a less pleasant term — high-deductible health insurance plans, which the accounts are often paired with.

Next year, you will be eligible to open an HSA if your minimum deductible for a high-deductible health insurance is $1,350 for a single person, with a maximum outof-pocket expense of $6,650. For a family, the minimum is $2,700, with an out-of-pocket cap of $13,300.

A recent annual study by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research & Education Trust found that the average worker paid $5,714 for a family health insurance plan in 2017, or 30 percent of the $18,764 total cost.

HSAs, meanwhile, can provide an even bigger benefit later in life. When you take out money in retirement from tax-deferred savings plans such as 401(k)s, you pay income tax on the amount. In retirement, if you’re 65 or older, HSA money isn’t taxed, ever, if it’s used for qualified medical expenses.

So if you can afford to leave some money in an HSA to increase taxfree until you retire, you can use it to pay Medicare Part B and Part D premiums, a part of long-term care insurance policy premiums and other medical expenses.

Basically, HSA savings can give you financial flexibilit­y in retirement. If you have enough income after retiring that you worry about being pushed into a higher tax bracket, paying qualified medical expenses out of your HSA can be helpful.

Todd Minear, a financial planner at Open Road Wealth in Kansas City, Missouri, talks with his clients about lining up such “tax diversific­ation” so they will have more flexibilit­y later in life.

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