What is an HSA?
A Health Savings Account (HSA) is a tax-advantaged savings account available to people enrolled in a qualifying High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP). You contribute pre-tax dollars, the money grows tax-free, and you can withdraw it tax-free for qualified medical expenses — anytime, at any age.
What makes the HSA unique is that it combines features of three different accounts: a medical expense account (tax-free medical withdrawals), an investment account (tax-free growth), and a retirement account (unlimited rollover, no RMDs, penalty-free after 65 for any purpose).
The three tax advantages
Compare this to other retirement accounts:
| Account | Pre-tax In? | Tax-free Growth? | Tax-free Out? |
|---|---|---|---|
| HSA (medical) | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Traditional 401(k) / IRA | ✓ Yes (pre-tax) | ✓ Tax-deferred | ✗ Taxed as income |
| Roth IRA / Roth 401(k) | ✗ After-tax | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes (qualified) |
| Taxable brokerage | ✗ After-tax | ✗ Taxed annually | ✗ Capital gains tax |
The HSA is the only account with all three checkmarks — for qualified medical expenses. This is why many financial planners call it the most tax-efficient account in the U.S. tax code.
Who can contribute: HDHP requirement
To contribute to an HSA, you must be enrolled in a qualifying High-Deductible Health Plan. For 2026, a plan qualifies as an HDHP if it meets these IRS thresholds:
| Requirement | Self-Only Coverage | Family Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum deductible | $1,700 | $3,400 |
| Maximum out-of-pocket | $8,500 | $17,000 |
Additionally, you cannot contribute to an HSA if:
- You're enrolled in Medicare (Part A or B)
- You're claimed as a dependent on someone else's tax return
- You have other health coverage that isn't an HDHP (with some exceptions for dental, vision, disability, and certain accident/disease policies)
You generally cannot have both an HSA and a general-purpose FSA. However, if your employer offers a "Limited Purpose FSA" (covers only dental and vision), you can have that alongside an HSA without losing eligibility.
2026 contribution limits
Both spouses can each contribute the catch-up if both are 55+ and each has their own HSA. Combined family catch-up potential: $8,750 + $1,000 + $1,000 = $10,750 for a family with both spouses 55+.
Employer contributions count toward the annual limit — the combined employee + employer contributions cannot exceed the annual cap. If your employer contributes $1,000 to your HSA, your personal contribution is limited to $3,400 (self-only) or $7,750 (family).
Investing your HSA balance
Most HSA providers allow you to invest your balance in mutual funds or ETFs once you exceed a minimum cash threshold (often $1,000–$2,500). Once invested, the money grows tax-free — just like an IRA. The key difference: you should think of the invested HSA money as retirement savings, not a checking account for medical bills.
Tips for maximizing HSA investment growth:
- Choose low-cost index funds when available (some providers offer Vanguard, Fidelity, or iShares options)
- Maintain a small cash buffer for near-term medical expenses; invest the rest
- Compare HSA providers — fees vary widely. If your employer's HSA has high fees, some plans allow you to invest through a separate provider after contributing through payroll
- Treat the HSA like a second IRA — invest aggressively while young, shift conservatively as you approach retirement
The HSA retirement strategy: save receipts, reimburse later
The single most powerful HSA strategy is almost unknown: pay medical expenses out-of-pocket today and save all receipts — then reimburse yourself years or decades later, tax-free.
The IRS has no time limit on HSA reimbursements. A medical expense from 2026 can be reimbursed with an HSA withdrawal in 2046 — completely tax-free. This effectively converts your HSA into a tax-free savings account for past medical costs.
Here's how it works in practice:
- During your working years, pay medical bills from regular savings or a checking account
- Keep all receipts (digital is fine) organized by year
- Let the HSA balance grow invested — untouched — for 20–30 years
- In retirement, "reimburse" yourself for all those past expenses, tax-free, to supplement income
Fidelity estimates a 65-year-old couple needs $300,000–$350,000 for healthcare in retirement. A family maxing their HSA at $8,750/year for 25 years with a 7% average return accumulates roughly $600,000 — all available tax-free for medical expenses. That's a complete solution to one of retirement's biggest costs.
What happens at age 65?
At 65, the HSA becomes even more flexible. The rules change as follows:
- Qualified medical withdrawals: Still completely tax-free, as always
- Non-medical withdrawals: Subject to ordinary income tax, but no longer subject to the 20% penalty — exactly like a Traditional IRA
- Medicare premiums: You can pay Medicare Part B, Part D, and Medicare Advantage premiums tax-free from your HSA (but not Medigap/supplemental premiums)
- New contributions: Stop when you enroll in Medicare — Medicare and HSA contributions are mutually exclusive
This makes the HSA a true "super IRA" — it offers everything a Traditional IRA offers (pre-tax, tax-deferred growth, taxable withdrawals after 65) plus tax-free medical withdrawals that a Traditional IRA cannot provide.
HSA vs FSA: key differences
| Feature | HSA | FSA (Health) |
|---|---|---|
| Requires HDHP? | Yes | No |
| 2026 contribution limit | $4,400 / $8,750 | $3,400 |
| Funds roll over year to year? | Yes — fully | No — "use it or lose it" (with limited grace period) |
| Can invest the balance? | Yes | No |
| Portable (keeps after job change)? | Yes — fully yours | Generally no |
| Can use in retirement? | Yes — including non-medical after 65 | No — expires when leaving employer |
Frequently asked questions
The IRS defines qualified medical expenses broadly under IRC §213(d). This includes: doctor visits, prescriptions, dental and vision care, mental health services, chiropractic care, LASIK, long-term care insurance premiums, COBRA premiums, Medicare premiums (Part B, D, and Medicare Advantage — not Medigap), and hundreds of other items. Publication 502 has the complete list. Many over-the-counter medications and medical supplies now also qualify (since the CARES Act of 2020).
Yes — completely independent limits. In 2026, you can contribute $8,750 to an HSA (family) and $7,500 to an IRA in the same year. You can also contribute to both an HSA and a 401(k). The HSA limit does not reduce or affect IRA or 401(k) limits.
Your existing HSA balance is completely yours to keep. You just cannot make new contributions during any year (or partial year) when you're not enrolled in a qualifying HDHP. You can still invest the existing balance and spend it on qualified medical expenses at any time. If you switch back to an HDHP later, you can resume contributions.
Withdrawing HSA funds for non-qualified expenses before age 65 triggers a 20% excise tax penalty plus ordinary income taxes on the amount withdrawn. This is harsher than the 10% IRA penalty. The 20% penalty goes away entirely at age 65 — non-medical withdrawals then are only taxed as income (no penalty), making the HSA equivalent to a Traditional IRA for non-medical use after retirement age.
Yes. You can use HSA funds to pay for qualified medical expenses of your spouse and anyone you claim as a tax dependent — even if they're not on your health plan. The only rule is that your own coverage must be an HDHP for you to make contributions.