Health Savings Accounts offer a triple tax advantage that beats even Roth IRAs. Yet most people use them wrong—or don't use them at all. This changes today.
The Triple Tax Advantage
Tax-Deductible Contributions
Like traditional 401(k)—reduce taxable income immediately
Tax-Free Growth
Investments grow without capital gains or dividend taxes
Tax-Free Withdrawals
For qualified medical expenses—at any age, no penalties
No other account in the U.S. tax code offers all three benefits.
2025 HSA Contribution Limits
| Coverage Type | 2025 Limit | Age 55+ Catch-Up | Total (55+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | $4,150 | +$1,000 | $5,150 |
| Family | $8,300 | +$1,000 | $9,300 |
HSA Eligibility Requirements
To contribute to an HSA, you must:
- Be enrolled in a High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP)
- Not be enrolled in Medicare
- Not be claimed as a dependent
- Have no other health coverage (with exceptions)
2025 HDHP Requirements
| Minimum Deductible | Maximum Out-of-Pocket | |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | $1,600 | $8,050 |
| Family | $3,200 | $16,100 |
The Secret: Use HSA as a Stealth Retirement Account
The HSA Retirement Strategy
- Max out HSA contributions every year
- Pay medical expenses out-of-pocket (if you can afford it)
- Save all medical receipts forever
- Invest HSA funds in stock index funds
- Let it grow tax-free for 20-40 years
- In retirement: Reimburse yourself for old medical expenses OR use for current healthcare costs
HSA Growth Over 30 Years
Scenario: Max out family HSA ($8,300/year) for 30 years, invest in index funds (8% return)
| Years | Contributions | Investment Growth | Total Balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | $83,000 | $37,646 | $120,646 |
| 20 | $166,000 | $216,932 | $382,932 |
| 30 | $249,000 | $695,551 | $944,551 |
Nearly $1 million tax-free for medical expenses in retirement! Healthcare costs in retirement average $300,000+, so this covers it entirely.
Qualified Medical Expenses
HSA funds can be used tax-free for:
- Doctor visits, hospital stays
- Prescription medications
- Dental care, orthodontics
- Vision care, glasses, contacts, LASIK
- Mental health services
- Medicare premiums (but not Medigap)
- Long-term care insurance premiums (age-limited)
- Many over-the-counter items
After Age 65: Even More Flexibility
Once you turn 65:
- Qualified medical expenses: Still 100% tax-free
- Non-medical withdrawals: Taxed as ordinary income (like traditional IRA)—no 20% penalty
Essentially, at 65, your HSA becomes a traditional IRA with the bonus of tax-free medical withdrawals.
HSA vs FSA (Flexible Spending Account)
| Feature | HSA | FSA |
|---|---|---|
| Rollover | YES—yours forever | NO—use it or lose it |
| Portable | YES—follows you job to job | NO—lose when leaving employer |
| Investment | YES—can invest like IRA | NO—cash only |
| Contribution Limit | $4,150/$8,300 | $3,200 |
| Eligibility | Must have HDHP | Any health plan |
Best HSA Providers
| Provider | Account Fee | Investment Options | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fidelity HSA | $0 | Excellent—stocks, ETFs, mutual funds | Overall best |
| Lively | $0 | Good—TD Ameritrade partnership | Easy interface |
| HealthEquity | Varies | Good selection | Employer plans |
Common HSA Mistakes
Leaving Cash Uninvested
Most HSA balance sits in cash earning 0.01%. Invest in index funds for decades of growth.
Using for Every Small Expense
If you can afford it, pay medical expenses out-of-pocket and let HSA grow tax-free.
Not Saving Receipts
Save all medical receipts—you can reimburse yourself years or decades later, tax-free!
The HSA Priority in Your Retirement Strategy
Recommended Contribution Order:
- 401(k) up to employer match (free money)
- Max out HSA (triple tax advantage)
- Max out Roth IRA
- Max out 401(k)
- Taxable brokerage account