Health savings accounts: A second retirement plan
Anna Robaton, special to CNBC.com
Thursday, 16 Jun 2016 | 10:00 AM ET
CNBC.com
Ask around for retirement advice and you are likely to hear a familiar
refrain: Start saving early, and put enough into your 401(k) plan to capture the
maximum matching contribution from your employer.
But some experts argue that many investors are passing up (or
underutilizing) a powerful savings tool — the triple tax-advantaged health
savings account — in their pursuit of a secure retirement. Greg Geisler, an
associate professor of accounting at the University of Missouri–St. Louis, is
one such expert.
In an article published earlier this year in the "Journal of Financial
Planning," Geisler argues that, in many cases, workers with both
employer-matched 401(k) plans and HSAs are better off from a wealth-building
standpoint prioritizing contributions to HSAs.
"HSAs," wrote Geisler, "need to be incorporated into financial planners'
recommendations to individuals."
"The proper advice to some individual clients," he added, "may be to
maximize contributions to their HSA first and then contribute enough to their
401(k) to get the maximum employer contribution second — instead of the
traditional advice to get the maximum employer 401(k) match first."
Health savings accounts — authorized by the Medicare Modernization Act of
2003 — are available only to people enrolled in high-deductible health insurance
plans meeting strict criteria, including certain minimum deductibles and
out-of-pocket maximums. As with 401(k) plans, HSAs typically offer a menu of
investment options.
The estimated number of Americans covered by HSA-eligible health plans
stands at 22 million and is growing at a fast clip of about 25 percent a year,
according to the Health Savings Account Council at the American Bankers
Association. Most HSA-eligible health plans are employer-sponsored, but the
plans are also sold through the exchanges created under the Affordable Care Act.
In theory, HSAs encourage consumers to save for future medical expenses and
spend more prudently on health care since they are using their own money.
According to some advisors, HSAs are also the Holy Grail of savings vehicles
because of their rare triple-tax benefit. Contributions to HSAs are made with
pretax dollars (in most states), assets grow tax-free, and distributions are
tax-free if used to pay for qualified medical expenses or as reimbursement for
such expenses.
Unlike workplace flexible-spending accounts, HSAs don't have a
"use-it-or-lose-it" rule and are "portable," meaning workers who are no longer
covered by HSA-eligible health plans because of job changes can continue to tap
existing HSAs to pay for qualified medical expenses.
What's particularly enticing to some savers is the fact that withdrawals
for qualified medical expenses can be taken at any time. For instance, retirees
with balances that have been building over time can take tax-free withdrawals
for qualified medical expenses incurred years earlier.
There is no need to provide proof of having incurred qualified medical
expenses to take withdrawals, but it's wise to keep records in case of an
Internal Revenue Service audit of your HSA distributions, experts say.
"With an HSA, money goes in tax-free, builds up tax-free and, as long as it
is pulled out for a qualified medical expense, comes out tax-free," said Paul
Fronstin, director of health research at the Employee Benefit Research
Institute. "You get a better tax break [on withdrawals for qualified medical
expenses] than you get with a 401(k) or an individual retirement
account."
Amy Hubble, a certified financial planner, said HSAs can be a powerful
retirement-savings vehicle for younger people and those without children, who
typically don't have big medical expenses and are able to let their balances
compound over long periods.
Hubble tries to convey this message to clients whose benefits at work
include HSA-eligible health plans. But she has found that some clients are
reluctant to choose high-deductible coverage and forgo the traditional co-pay
for doctors' visits.
"For people who don't visit the doctor very often and can stomach paying
the rare visit out of pocket, the ability to compound investment growth over a
long working lifetime can be incredibly powerful," said Hubble, founding
principal of Radix Financial.
Hubble points out that one of the primary reasons to save for retirement is
to put aside money for medical expenses, which can be daunting for older
Americans. Fidelity Investments estimates that a couple, both age 65 and
retiring in 2015 with Medicare as their primary insurance, will need $245,000 in
today's dollars for health-care costs during retirement.
According to Geisler at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, for many
employees the tax savings on contributions to HSAs increases wealth by more than
an employer match on 401(k) contributions.
"The fact is that if your employer 401(k) match is low enough and your
combined tax savings on HSA contributions is high enough, you'd amass more
wealth by making HSA contributions first," he said. "I'm not saying don't
contribute to both; I'm saying the math recommends maxing out what you can put
into your HSA each year."
Like other savings vehicles, HSAs have both advantages and limitations.
There are, for instance, relatively low caps (indexed for inflation) on yearly
contributions. For 2016, the maximum contribution is $3,350 for an individual
and $6,750 for a family. Those age 55 or older can make an additional $1,000
yearly "catch-up" contribution.
"If you are using an HSA purely as a retirement savings vehicle and not
taking advantage of your 401(k), your contributions will not amount to a lot of
money and are probably not going to cover health-care expenses in retirement,"
said Fronstin of the Employee Benefits Research Institute.
What's more, withdrawals from HSAs for anything other than qualified
medical expenses are subject to income tax, plus a hefty 20 percent penalty tax.
For those 65 and older, non-qualified distributions are subject to income tax,
but not the penalty tax.
In addition, some health-care experts argue that HSA-eligible health plans
may actually discourage lower-income consumers from getting needed care because
of the out-of-pocket costs. In a 2015 survey by the nonprofit Commonwealth Fund,
two out of five adults with deductibles representing 5 percent or more of their
incomes reported that they avoided getting care, including preventative tests,
because of their deductibles.
High-deductible health plans have lower premiums than traditional HMO- or
PPO-type plans and have caught on with employers seeking to reduce their premium
costs. Many companies contribute premium savings to employees' HSAs.
"What we have found is that low- or moderate-income people with
high-deductible plans tend to avoid getting needed care because of the cost,"
said Sara Collins, vice president for the Health Care Coverage and Access
program at The Commonwealth Fund.
As it turns out, people with higher income levels are more likely than
those of modest means to opt for HSA-qualified health plans, because they are
less concerned by the potential out-of-pocket medical costs and more interested
in the tax savings, according to Fronstin at EBRI.
Despite the growing popularity of HSA-qualified plans, it may be just a
matter of time before they are no longer offered through insurance exchanges.
According to the American Bankers Association, the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services recently issued a regulation that would effectively eliminate the
plans from exchanges beginning next year, causing an estimated 2.8 million
Americans to lose their coverage.
The regulation "revives the whole
'if-you-like-your-health-plan-you-can-keep-it' problem," said Kevin McKechnie,
executive director of the ABA's Health Savings Account Council. The ABA is
calling on the Department of Health and Human Services to reconsider the
regulation.
— By Anna Robaton, special to CNBC.com