October
27, 2014
Health savings accounts
What they are
A health savings account
is a tax-advantaged medical savings account available to taxpayers in the
United States who are enrolled in an HSA-qualified high-deductible health plan.
HSAs
can grow tax-deferred in your account for later use. There’s no deadline for
making a withdrawal: Consumers can reimburse themselves in future years for
medical costs incurred now.
Individuals (self-only
coverage)
- $3,350 (up $50 from 2014)
Family coverage - $6,650 (up $100 from
2014)
The annual limitation on
deductions for an individual with family coverage under a high-deductible
health plan will be $6,650 for 2015.
The maximum out-of-pocket
employee expense will increase next year to $6,450 for single coverage from
$6,350, and to $12,900, from $12,700, for family coverage.
What’s new
The out-of-pocket limits include
deductibles, coinsurance and copays, but not premiums. But starting in 2015,
prescription-drug costs must count toward the out-of-pocket maximum.
Devenir projected
that the HSA market will exceed $24 billion in HSA assets covering more than 13
million accounts by the end of 2014. Longer-term predictions are
far greater: The Institute for HealthCare Consumerism, for one, estimates that 50 million Americans will be covered by
HSA-qualified health plans by Jan. 1, 2019, and that HSA
adoption will grow to 37 million.
Flexible spending
accounts
What they are
FSAs allow employees to
contribute pre-tax dollars to pay for out-of-pocket health care expenses —
including deductibles, copayments and other qualified medical, dental or vision
expenses not covered by the individual’s health insurance plan.
They’re also known as
flexible spending arrangements, and they’re more commonly offered with
traditional medical plans.
Limits
Under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act, FSAs have a $2,500 annual limit. Some
predict it may rise by $50 next year, the IRS hasn’t announced the FSA
contribution limit for 2015 yet.
What’s new
Last fall the U.S. Treasury
Department issued new rules that let employers offer employees
the $500 carryover. Previously, unused employee FSA contributions were
forfeited to the employer at the end of the plan year or grace period, which
industry insiders say were a barrier to adoption. The rule went into effect in
2014.
Alegeus Technologies said that clients
who have actively promoted the FSA rollover allowance to their employer groups
and eligible employees are seeing 11 percent incremental growth in FSA enrollment
and 9 percent growth in FSA elections — compared to a flat overall FSA market
growth.
The change to the FSA use-it-or-lose-it rule
was greeted enthusiastically by employers, consumers and industry insiders.
Many believe adoption will grow with that amendment.
A survey from
Alegeus Technologies says most consumers, and even account holders
specifically, do not fully understand account-based health plans,
including HSAs, FSAs and health reimbursement accounts. Only 50 percent of FSA
holders passed a FSA proficiency quiz.
http://www.benefitspro.com/2014/10/27/2015-hsa-and-fsa-cheat-sheet?utm_source=BPro_HSA_Promo_102914&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=BenefitsPro_Marketing_Campaign
No comments:
Post a Comment