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SolveYourProblem
Article Series:
Health Insurance
Health
Savings Accounts: The Basics
Health
Savings Accounts (HSAs) are becoming more and more a need
than a luxury. You must be enrolled in
a health care plan to qualify for a Health Savings Account.
Since they have been around, millions of people have qualified
and gotten one of these accounts. The trend should continue
to raise as more employers and companies offer this benefit
as a bonus to their medical plans. Some companies aren’t quite
there yet but many have jumped on the bandwagon. There are
some basic rules that can help an individual or corporation
decide to enter the HSA market.
To
establish an HAS, there are some rules and regulations. It is like establishing an individual retirement account (IRA)
in most cases. In fact the documents are very similar and the
procedure as well. An HSA trustee can add terms to their agreement
regarding the effecting policy and procedure of their HSA.
These terms can include any of the following but that may not
be all that is required. Included in your agreement could be
definitions, fees and expenses, amendments, disqualifying provisions,
investment options, distributions, transfers and rollovers,
reports and records, termination and/or resignation, and liability
protection. There might be more of less of these conditions
depending on the insurer.
HSA eligibility requires you to have an Internal
Revenue Code to even desire to be eligible. You must be enrolled in a high-deductible
medical care plan. So, people who don’t pay a deductible or
it is very low, do not qualify for this benefit. Some exemptions
do apply of course but you would need to contact the right
person to find out. You must not be able to be claimed as a
dependent for anyone else or on Medicare. To qualify your deductible
needs to be for an individual a minimum or $1000, and your
out of pocket expenses can’t exceed $5,100 for that year. For
a family, the deductible needs to be a minimum of $2000 and
the out of pocket portion can’t exceed $10,200 per year. There
is a cost of living deduction as well and your agent to better
save you money will adjust things. Many organizations require
that you prove you are eligible prior to a contract. It is
the individual asking for the HSA that must figure out that
they qualify or might qualify.
The yearly
contribution can’t exceed the deductible amount
or combination with out of pocket expenses. As long as the
individual has the high-deductible health plan they are qualifying.
If you lose this plan, you will not be eligible for that month
or period of time. If you are married and have separate high-deductible
health plan, it is the lowest deductible amount that the family
as a whole can meet. There are no combining deductibles to
get a higher benefit. If you qualify, you can establish a regular
contribution, a rollover contribution, or a transfer contribution
plan. For the money to be deductible for a specific tax year,
one must file by the deadline to receive the benefits. If an
eligible individual's employer contributes to his or her HSA,
the employer, not the HSA owner, is entitled to a deduction.
An HSA
custodian or trustee reports the contributions on IRS
Form 5498-SA, HSA, Archer MSA, or Medicare Choice MSA Information.
Copies of the report are due to each participant and the IRS
by May 31, 2006. The owner is responsible for reporting the
contribution amount on the proper forms to be submitted and
file them with the income taxes that year. The distributions
are to be made by the owner, if different than the participant.
These will tax-free if used to pay for, or reimburse qualifying
medical expenses that occurred after putting the plan into
effect. These expenses include and could exceed the diagnosis,
cure, treatment, or prevention of disease, prescription and
certain nonprescription drugs, and transportation and certain
lodging costs primarily for and essential to qualified medical
care and certain qualified long-term care services. It is an
HSA owner's responsibility to determine the taxability of an
HSA distribution and whether it is legitimate. The guidance
of a tax or legal professional may be necessary to determine
whether an expense is a qualified medical expense to avoid
penalties. Click here to to view health insurance quotes, compare plans side-by-side and apply for the most affordable health insurance within your budget. I did this myself (June 17, 2011) to change my health insurance policy. Saved me $84 per month (or $1,008 per year). It's my SolveYourProblem recommendation.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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