
In general terms, what is an HSA and how does it
work?
A Health Savings Account (or HSA) is a trust or
custodial account (similar to an individual retirement account,
or IRA) to which an individual (or his or her employer) may
contribute cash on a tax-preferred basis while that individual
is covered solely by high deductible health insurance. In simple
terms, the individual self-insures up to the high deductible
amount, and purchases relatively low-cost insurance in case
health care claims are very high during a year. The HSA serves
as a savings account to ensure that money is available to pay
health claims that fall under the deductible. The federal
government encourages HSA funding by making HSA contributions
deductible (or excludible, if paid by an employer) from federal
taxable income.
The general policy objective of an HSA is to reestablish the
consumer of health care services (for example you, if you are
the HSA account holder) as also the payor of those services. In
theory, at least, this should reduce your cost of health care
because you will:
- seek out health care service providers who charge
reasonable rates;
- avoid paying an insurance company for the risk of
insuring amounts up to the policy deductible;
- care to question mistakes that are made on your medical
bills;
- have additional incentive to live a healthy lifestyle;
and
- be less likely to seek inappropriate treatment (such as
going to the emergency room when a next-day appointment will
do).
What are the contribution limits?
For 2008, up to $2,900 may be contributed to your HSA
if you have self-only coverage and up to $5,800 may be
contributed to your HSA if you have family coverage. If you will
have attained age 55 by the end of 2008, these amounts are
increased by $900.
What is a high deductible health plan (HDHP)?
You may have contributions made to your HSA only for
periods you are covered solely by a high deductible health plan.
For 2008, an HDHP generally is health insurance with a minimum
annual deductible of $1,100 for self-only coverage and $2,200
for family coverage. Also, the HDHP must provide for a maximum
annual out-of-pocket limit of $5,600 for self-only coverage and
$11,200 for family coverage. Thus, under an HDHP you will be
responsible for paying all of your health care costs during a
year up to your policy’s high deductible amount, but never more
than the maximum out-of-pocket amount.
What might an employer HSA-program look like?
An employer may be able to reduce significantly its
benefit outlays by implementing an HSA-based program for its
employees. There are many possible approaches to designing such
a program. Here are three:
Approach 1: employer pays
most or all costs. An employer might pay all group HDHP
premium costs for employees, and contribute cash on a tax-free
basis to the HSAs of its employees covered under the HDHP in an
amount equal or close to the contribution limits described
above. This approach might be appropriate for an employer that
has traditionally paid most or all of its employees’ health care
costs.
Approach 2: employer pays
much of the cost along with employees. An employer might
pay all of the group HDHP premium for its employees, and agree
to match contributions that employees pay into their own HSAs on
a tax-free basis (similar to matching contributions many
employers make to employee 401(k) accounts). This approach might
be appropriate for an employer that tends to share health care
costs with employees.
Approach 3: employer
requires employees to pay most costs. An employer might
agree to pay much less of the group HDHP premium (for example,
50% of the employee’s premium and none of the premium for
spouses and dependents), and require employees to fund their own
HSAs with tax preferred contributions. This approach might be
appropriate for an employer that requires employees to pay most
or all health care costs, or even for employers looking to
provide group health insurance when none is provided currently.
If you are an employee participating in an employer-sponsored
HSA program, you enjoy at least one major advantage over
individuals who fund their HSAs outside of the employment
relationship (even apart from access to coverage that is
provided under a group policy). That advantage is that the
dollars your employer and you use to pay the HDHP premiums and
contribute to your HSA are not subject to social security taxes.
Typically, this provides a benefit equal to 15.3% (shared by you
and your employer) of the dollars used for premiums and
contributions.
What might an individual HSA arrangement look like?
You may, of course, be able to obtain high deductible
health insurance under an individual health insurance policy
instead of having coverage provided under your employer’s group
policy. If your individual policy meets the requirements of an
HDHP, and if you are neither covered by non-HDHP insurance nor
taken as a personal exemption on another taxpayer’s tax return,
then you will generally be able to make tax deductible
contributions to your HSA.
How does the claim and reimbursement process
typically work?
In general, if you are covered by an HDHP you will use
health services in the same manner as if your policy were a
traditional low deductible policy. If the policy is a preferred
provider organization (“PPO”) policy, you will ordinarily select
and use physicians, hospitals and other health care providers
that are associated with the PPO network. You will provide
information about your HDHP coverage as you request services,
and the provider will inform the insurer that services were
used. The insurer will send you a statement noting the
negotiated rate, and if the year-to-date charges remain under
the deductible amount (which will ordinarily be so), you will
need to pay the service provider directly. If you have made HSA
contributions and funds remain in your HSA, you may pay the
provider directly from the HSA, or you may reimburse yourself
for payments made from your non-HSA funds. Alternatively, you
may pay for health care services with your non-HSA funds if, for
example, you either wanted to build a balance within your HSA or
if your HSA contained insufficient funds to pay the provider.
Distributions you receive from your HSA will generally not be
taxable to you if they are used to pay for qualified medical
expenses for you and your family or if they reimburse you for
qualified expenses you paid from your non-HSA funds, provided
you incurred those expenses in the past while you were an HSA
account holder.
What are the nitty gritty HSA details?
There are many details governing HSAs that are beyond
the scope of an overview. Click below for a detailed outline
that discusses those details. You can also read IRS Publication
969 at
http://www.irs.gov/publications/p969/ar02.html for more
information.
Can Echelon help me sort through the HSA issues?
Yes. Whether you are an employer thinking about
establishing an HSA program for your employees, or an individual
looking for individual HDHP coverage, Echelon can explain how
HSAs work, explain their potential benefits and risks, and help
you select both the right HDHP policy and HSA vendor.

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