Florida Health Savings Accounts - HSA Health Insurance
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Health Savings Accounts (HSA)
Health Savings Accounts (HSA's) were created by the Medicare bill signed by President Bush on December 8, 2003 and are designed to help individuals save for future qualified medical and retiree health expenses on a tax-free basis.
A Health Savings Account is an alternative to traditional health insurance. It is a savings product that offers a different way for consumers to pay for their health care. HSA's enable you to pay for current health expenses and save for future qualified medical and retiree health expenses on a tax-free basis.
You must be covered by a Qualified High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) to be able to take advantage of HSA's. An HDHP generally costs less than what traditional health care coverage costs, so the money that you save on insurance can therefore be put into the Health Savings Account.
You own and you control the money in your HSA. Decisions on how to spend the money are made by you without relying on a third party or a health insurer. You will also decide what types of investments to make with the money in the account in order to make it grow.
HSA's are not for everybody, but everybody should at least consider them. When used properly you can drastically reduce the net cost of your insurance, increase your retirement nest egg, and have comprehensive health insurance for you and your family.
A Health Savings Account is an account that is set up by you, in your name, and functions similar to an Individual Retirement Account. It is not an IRA. The IRS allows you to open an HSA when you have a qualified high deductible plan. You are allowed to make deposits (up to the allowable amount) each year and take a 100% deduction from your income for that deposit. You can withdraw funds from the account whenever you want (usually by check or debit card). Withdrawals made for qualified medical expenses incur no penalties or taxes. If the withdrawal is not for a qualified medical expense then you will have to pay taxes on the withdrawal as well as penalties.
The funds you deposit accrue interest on a tax deferred basis. Some companies also allow you to invest the funds in mutual funds.
A complete explanation of Health Savings Accounts and how you can benefit from them is best handled on a case-by-case basis. We can do this over the phone or in person which ever is better for you. Just contact us and and we will be happy to discuss it with you. Your Certified Public Accountant (CPA) should also be able to give you some guidance on this. If they are unfamiliar with these plans just have them give me a call and I'll bring them up to speed. My CPA loves them and since I told him about it they have recommended them to a majority of their clients.
The following links are for various articles put out by the IRS, Department of the Treasury, and various news publications around the country.
Detailed health savings account - HSA - information from the Department of the Treasury's Office of Public Affairs.
- Health Savings Account - HSA - brochure from the Department of the Treasury.
- Health Savings Account - HSA - HSA basics.
- HSA Frequently Asked Questions.
- HSA Statute
IRS (Department of Treasury Clarification).
"Health Savings Accounts - The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 created a new, tax-advantaged way for certain people to save for health care expenses. You must be covered by a high-deductible health plan to open and contribute to a Health Savings Account (HSA). IRS and Treasury have provided guidance on how HSAs work." (read more...)
Council for Affordable Health Insurance
The Council for Affordable Health Insurance (CAHI) is a research and advocacy association of insurance carriers active in the individual, small group, MSA and senior markets.
Wall Street Journal
Health and Taxes
By Martin Feldstein
"The Health Savings Accounts that President Bush recently signed into law may well be the most important piece of legislation of 2003. These new tax and medical insurance rules have the potential to transform health-care finances, bringing costs under control and making health care reflect what patients and their doctors really want. It is remarkable that this legislation has received so little public attention..." (read more...)
Fortune
Stay Healthy, Get Wealthy
The new health savings accounts are especially attractive to entrepreneurs.
By Jeanne Lee
"Small-business owners have often felt like second-class citizens when it comes to their own health insurance. With U.S. premiums up 13.9% last year, a common strategy for entrepreneurs is to buy "catastrophic" insurance, which covers big expenses but leaves you on the hook for routine doctor visits and drugs until a high deductible is met and the coverage kicks in. But with the recent introduction of health savings accounts (HSAs), help is here..." (read more...)
Kiplinger
Switching to Health Savings Accounts
By Kimberly Lankford
"I have a medical savings account and I want to switch to the new health savings account. When and how can I do that? Don't worry about making the switch, for most MSA participants it should happen automatically. But keep your eyes open. Many new providers are expected to jump into the market, so you might find better services..." (read more...)
Washington Times
New health savings accounts help pay soaring medical costs
"As medical-insurance premiums skyrocket, more companies are looking for ways to pass on costs to their workers. At the same time, self-employed people and other individuals who don't have corporate plans are seeking health care policies that are affordable..." (read more...)
USA Today
Health savings can be tax shelter
By Thomas A. Fogarty, USA TODAY
"A potentially lucrative tax shelter becomes available to the masses next month, courtesy of the Medicare act Congress just passed.
In IRA-like fashion, investors soon can build tax-sheltered nest eggs to cover out-of-pocket medical costs. Called a Health Savings Account, the new investment vehicle permits a taxpayer, starting in 2004, to shelter up to $4,500 annually..." (read more...)
Consumers have trouble finding health savings accounts
By Julie Appleby, USA TODAY
"Health savings accounts touted by the president in his State of the Union address became available Jan. 1, but consumers are learning that it may take some effort to find one.
While proponents say the accounts will help usher in a new era of consumerism in health care, only a few insurers are offering them and the Treasury Department has not finished issuing rules regarding them..." (read more...)
Managed Care Magazine
Movement Toward Individual Health Benefit Accounts
By Robert A. Connor
Department of Healthcare Management, Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota
- Do Insurance Constraints Benefit Consumers? This section provides the conceptual background for the historical shift of employer-based health insurance to managed care. It is vital for understanding the present transition to defined contribution benefits and individual health benefit accounts.
- The Evolution of Employer-Based Health Insurance traces the evolution of the level at which insurance is purchased, from individuals to groups to group-individual hybrids.
- Individual Health Benefit Accounts: Types, Pros, and Cons highlights different types of individual health benefit accounts, their pros and cons, and ways to optimize their good effects while minimizing the bad... (read more...)
Physician’s News Digest
Forgotten benefits of medical savings accounts
By T. Michael Regan, CPA
"The Health Insurance Affordability and Accountability Act became law in 1996. At that time a much-discussed provision of the act was one that allowed certain small businesses to establish Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs) between 1997 and the year 2000.
What are the benefits of MSAs? First and most obvious is the tax deduction derived from the contribution to the savings account. Then, the funds in the account grow tax-free. Money from the account may be used to pay for a variety of qualified health services in addition to the procedures covered by standard health care policies. Eyeglasses, dental care and long-term care insurance are good examples. Unused funds are carried over from year to year..." (read more...)
MSN - Money Central
A tax-free way to stay healthy and wealthy
By Jeff Schnepper
"Tax-deductible going in, no tax when you take it out. You can’t get a much better deal on any savings account than that.
I’m talking about the Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) that were created last year as part of the Medicare Act of 2003.
The concept is easy. Congress wants to give you the opportunity to take charge of your own health costs. So, if you buy their special ticket, you’ll be able to set up a magical account. You’ll be able to put money into that account and deduct the contribution. You pay no taxes while the money is held in the account. And, if you take the dollars out for the right reasons, there’s no tax ever..." (read more...)
Chicago Sun-Times
Health Savings Accounts great plan for health care
By Terry Savage Sun-Times Columnist
"The Health Savings Account was hidden away in the prescription drug bill passed by Congress last December. But unlike the seriously flawed drug plan, the Health Savings Account is an exciting concept that could make health insurance available -- affordable -- for millions of Americans who aren't covered by an employer plan.
It's a concept so new that the insurance industry is just gearing up to make it available. Health Savings Accounts combine inexpensive, high-deductible health insurance plans with a tax-advantaged savings account. "Tax-advantaged" is a new phrase, appropriate because this new account has so many different tax benefits..." (read more...)
WGN Channel 9 Chicago
Ilyce Glink: Health Savings Accounts
By Ilyce Glink
"Although some of the new Medicare Act President Bush signed last year won't go into effect until 2006, parts of it went into effect on January 1. You can take advantage of tax-free health savings accounts starting right now.
The new tax-free health savings accounts will correct a major distortion in the law and should provide both employees and those running their own businesses with a way to pay for health care with tax free dollars..." (read more...)
Financial Services Journal
The Health Savings Account (HSA) The Dawning of Expanded Health Care
By Paul M. League
"President George W. Bush signed into law the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 on December 8, 2003. Tucked along with it comes the January 2004 enactment of the Health Savings Account ("HSA"), created for persons prior to reaching Medicare age, typically age 65, and created to help one save to meet medical and retiree health expenses on a tax-free basis..." (read more...)
