The HSA: the triple tax advantage explained
Deductible going in, tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals. The most under-used account in US tax β used right, it can beat your 401(k).
Among US tax-advantaged accounts, the Health Savings Account is the only one to land all three breaks at once: deductible going in, tax-free growth, and tax-free withdrawals for qualified medical costs. Treated as a retirement vehicle rather than a year-by-year reimbursement account, it becomes one of the most powerful savings tools available β provided you qualify and don't trip over the eligibility traps.
The triple advantage in plain English
- In: contributions reduce your taxable income above the line. Made through payroll, they also dodge FICA β a perk no IRA can match.
- Grow: interest, dividends and capital gains accumulate tax-free inside the account.
- Out: withdrawals for qualified medical expenses come out tax-free, at any age.
2026 limits
| Limit | 2026 |
|---|---|
| Self-only contribution | $4,400 |
| Family contribution | $8,750 |
| Age 55+ catch-up | $1,000 |
| HDHP minimum deductible (self / family) | $1,700 / $3,400 |
| HDHP out-of-pocket max (self / family) | $8,500 / $17,000 |
The $1,000 catch-up isn't indexed for inflation. If both spouses are 55+, each must keep their own HSA to use their own catch-up.
Who qualifies
To contribute you must be:
- Covered by a qualifying HDHP on the 1st of the month.
- Not enrolled in any other disqualifying coverage β including a general-purpose FSA, most HRAs, a spouse's non-HDHP plan that covers you, or TRICARE.
- Not enrolled in any part of Medicare.
- Not claimed as someone else's dependent.
The 12-month testing period
Under the last-month rule, if you're HSA-eligible on December 1, you can contribute the full annual maximum for that year, even if you weren't eligible for the earlier months. But you must remain eligible for all 12 months of the following calendar year. Fail the test and the bonus contribution becomes taxable income plus a 10% additional tax.
Spend versus save
Most account-holders treat the HSA as a pre-tax wallet β money in, medical bill out, no tax. That works, but it leaves the strongest property on the table: tax-free growth.
The alternative β pay current medical bills out of pocket, leave the HSA invested in equities, and let it compound for decades β turns the account into something closer to a Roth IRA you can access at any age for medical needs. Most providers (Fidelity, Lively, HealthEquity, etc.) offer brokerage-style investing without a cash-balance minimum.
The shoebox method
What happens at 65
Two rules change. Qualified medical withdrawals stay tax-free β including premiums for Medicare Part B, Part D and Medicare Advantage, though not for Medigap. And the 20% penalty on non-medical withdrawals disappears; instead they're taxed as ordinary income, exactly like a Traditional IRA. HSAs also have no RMDs during the owner's lifetime β a structural advantage even over Roth 401(k)s.
HSA versus FSA
| Feature | HSA | FSA |
|---|---|---|
| Who owns it | You | Employer |
| Rolls over | Indefinitely | Use-it-or-lose-it (small carryover allowed) |
| Portable between jobs | Yes | No |
| Can be invested | Yes | No |
| HDHP required | Yes | No |
State tax β a sting in two states
The federal advantages apply in all 50 states, but California and New Jersey don't conform. In those states, HSA contributions get no state tax deduction, and interest, dividends and capital gains inside the HSA are taxable for state purposes each year. The federal triple advantage still applies, but in CA/NJ it shrinks to a double advantage at the state level.
Sources & further reading
This guide is general information, not personal tax advice, and reflects the rules we believe to apply as at June 2026 β rates and thresholds change. Always check your own figures against the IRS and consider a qualified adviser before acting. You remain responsible for the accuracy of anything you file.
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