A potentially lucrative tax
shelter became available to the masses in 2004, 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.
But there's a catch. The new accounts are linked to high-deductible
Health Insurance
plans. The accounts are designed in part to help
consumers pay for health expenses until insurance benefits kick in.
Just how popular the new accounts will become remains unclear. But their
cost-saving features and likely promotion by big employers could make
them huge.
Uses for accounts
The new Health Savings Accounts provide a broad range of tax-free
withdrawals including:
Doctors, dentists and hospitals
Artificial limbs
Drugs
Eyeglasses and contacts
Chiropractic
Laboratory expenses
Nursing home costs
Physical therapy
Psychoanalysis
X-rays
Nursing home insurance premiums
"They have the potential to become the dominant kind of health care
financing in the next five to 10 years," says Greg Scandlen, a health
care expert at the Galen Institute, a Washington think tank.
But they aren't for everyone, says Scandlen, an advocate of the new
accounts. Families with young children probably will benefit more from
traditional managed-care options such as preferred provider
organizations. And, he says, HSAs demand more planning than many people
are willing to give.
But the new accounts could become the preferred route for families with
few health care spending needs, as well as those who spend $4,000 or
more a year, he says.
The self-employed and others who buy individual health policies can
plunge in as early as next month. Workers insured through employers
could see them during their next open enrollment period, when they're
allowed to adjust workplace benefits.
Insurers Golden Rule of Lawrenceville, Ill., and Fortis Health of
Milwaukee, plan to begin selling HSAs on the first
businessday of 2004.
Others say they need time. "We're not poised to jump in, but we're
assessing the legislation," says Mutual of Omaha spokesman Jim Nolan.
How the new accounts work:
The health care angle
High-deductible Health Insurance
policies are now the rage. By leaving
more costs for a patient to cover out-of-pocket, rapidly rising
insurance
premiums will moderate, the theory goes.
President Bush and Republicans in Congress favor investment accounts to
help more Americans cover expenses until a high-deductible policy kicks
in. As defined in the new Medicare legislation, which Bush is expected
to sign, a high-deductible policy is $1,000 for individual coverage,
$2,000 for a family.
The accounts have the potential to accumulate huge balances over years
of contributions and investment gains. In theory, that puts consumers in
a better position to pay for their own health care as they grow old,
when costs typically peak. The new law imposes two requirements for
opening an HSA:
• It must be done in conjunction with high-deductible health coverage.
•A taxpayermust be under 65 — the age of Medicare eligibility — when
opening an account.
The tax angle
Few Americans — particularly among the young — are likely to max out
annual contributions just so they can pay drug and nursing home bills in
old age. But the tax incentives are powerful for those who do, or for
anyone who wants to build a modest account to cover routine health
expenses.
The accounts will join about a half dozen other major provisions in the
federal law that provide a tax advantage for health care spending. But
nothing now in the law combines the broad eligibility and generous tax
benefits of HSAs. "This is far and above superior to all the other ones
that are out there," says Jay Nawrocki, legislative analyst at tax
publisher CCH.
Contributions, investment growth and withdrawals for health-related
expenses are all free from taxation. That makes tax benefits superior
even to IRAs. With IRAs, the money is taxed either before it goes into
the investment account, or as it is taken out. Of course, money from an
IRA, when taken after age 591/2, can be spent without restriction.
Health savings accounts carry generous annual contribution limits. The
law allows an annual tax write-off equal to the deductible amount of the
accompanying health care plan. But the tax write-off can't exceed $2,250
for an individual plan, $4,500 for a family plan. Limits bump higher in
years ahead.
For taxpayers 55 and older, the new law permits an additional $500
contribution in 2004. And, like IRAs, contributions may be made for the
previous year through April 15.
CCH's Nawrocki says health-savings accounts are likely to diminish the
popularity of flexible-spending accounts.
Flex-spending accounts permit workers to make pretax contributions by
payroll deduction to meet health care costs.
But they have two big drawbacks: Money in the accounts earns no
interest; and unspent funds must be forfeited at the end of each year.
Flex accounts won't be rendered obsolete, though, because they allow
pretax purchase of routine health care items not now covered by HSAs.
In general, tax-free expenditures for HSAs mimic those the IRS now
allows as deductions to taxpayers who have been smacked by unusually
high medical bills.
An HSA holder who uses the money for a non-health expenditure pays tax
on it, plus a 10% penalty. After age 65, a withdrawal used for a
non-health purpose will be taxed, but not penalized.
The investment angle
The new law imposes few restrictions on how money might be invested.
Health insurers will be first out of the box to offer the new accounts,
but banks, brokerages and mutual fund companies are free to jump in,
says Scandlen of the Galen Institute.
HSAs now have a first cousin in tax law, Archer Medical Savings
Accounts. In seven years of existence, Archer MSAs haven't gotten much
use, partly because of strict eligibility requirements. HSAs replace
them.
Brian McManus, vice president at Golden Rule, says the company's first
HSA will direct all investment money to an interest-bearing savings
account. Fortis Health Vice President Scott Krienke says his company
will offer HSA investors a choice of a savings account or an array of
mutual funds.
As with IRAs, Scandlen says, HSA investors are allowed to hold multiple
accounts, but they'll be subject to a single annual contribution limit.
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