Anyone jumping on the HSA bandwagon? It actually looks like a good deal to me.
Basically, you just buy a high deductible health care plan, and you can invest up to your deductible every year. And it's tax deductible and it grows tax free. Lots of choices about what you can invest in, basically the same rules as IRA investments.
I got the following from the HSA4america website-
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A Health Savings Account is a tax-favored savings account combined with a qualifying high-deductible health insurance plan. By allowing you to deposit tax-deductible funds into a health savings account that you can use to cover medical costs, Health Savings Accounts enable you to take control of your own health care decisions. One of the key aspects to health savings accounts is a system that is responsive primarily to individual consumers, rather than to third-party payers. This concept is known as consumer driven health care.
First, you must have a high-deductible health insurance plan that qualifies to be partnered with an Health Savings Account. These plans are available through various insurance companies, depending upon what part of the country you live. The plans are all similar in the fact that they have deductibles between $1,000 and $5,100 for singles, and between $2,000 and $10,200 for families.
Once your insurance policy has become effective, you may begin to fund your Health Savings Account.
A Health Savings Account allows you to legally avoid federal income tax by saving 100% of the health plan's deductible, up to $2,650 for singles or $5,250 for families, into your Health Savings Account. Whatever you deposit into your account up to April 15, is an "above the line" tax deduction for the previous year's income taxes, meaning you get a federal income tax deduction for money you put in even if you take the standard deduction and donât itemize deductions. If your employer makes a Health Savings Account contribution for you, it is âexcludedâ from income, and not subject to any income tax or FICA. Either way, this will immediately reduce your federal income tax due for the year. Most states also allow you to take a state income tax deduction for HSA contributions. To see if your state offers tax deductions, please see our HSA State Income Tax page.
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Just google "HSA" and you'll get plenty of info-
Don-