Your Money: What to do
with your dormant Health Savings Account
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[April 06, 2017]
By Beth Pinsker
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - A Health Savings Account is supposed to stay with you
for life, but if you do not use it, you could lose actually lose it.
HSAs are intended to make medical expenses more affordable by allowing
consumers with high-deductible health plans to set aside pretax money in
an account that, unlike a Flexible Spending Account, will not expire at
the end of the year.
You can keep these accounts as you change jobs, which allows you to
build up funds that you can spend as you need to or save for retirement.
But at least 24 percent of the 20 million-plus Americans with these
accounts leave them inactive, according to research firm Devenir.
Some may not have enough extra cash to deposit. Some currently may not
be eligible to put in money because they have changed health plans. Some
may have simply have forgotten they opened the accounts in the first
place.
When an HSA account sits for too long with no activity, the bank holding
it has several options, one of which is to turn the money over to the
state as unclaimed funds.
Before that happens, however, you will probably get a very sternly
worded letter filled with arcane terminology about state escheatment
law.
In escheatment, the state takes control of unclaimed assets, including
bank accounts abandoned by people who cannot be reached because they
have moved or died, settlement funds from lawsuits, or other awards that
were never claimed. Several websites, like unclaimed.org, allow you to
check by state to see if there are registered funds in your name.
Because Health Savings Accounts are often held by banks or credit unions
that treat them as regular checking accounts, rather than as retirement
investment accounts like an IRA, they can fall under escheatment law,
depending on the state.
"If the account is in checking, it might be one set of state rules; if
it's in a brokerage, it might be different rules," said Steve
Christenson, executive vice president of retirement and savings plan
provider Ascensus.
Christenson himself has four separate HSA accounts. While he stays on
top of them, he can understand how employees who hopscotch employers and
providers can lose track.
Here is what to do if you have a dormant HSA account:
* Tell the bank that you want to keep the account
The average HSA balance is $1,844, according to the Employee Benefit
Research Institute.
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A customer shops in the pharmacy department of a Target store in the
Brooklyn borough of New York June 15, 2015. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
There is a benefit to keeping the account open, even with a zero or low
balance, said HSA Consulting Services President Roy Ramthun. Even if you
cannot contribute right now, you may be able to do so in the future.
Internal Revenue Service rules start the clock on eligible expenses when
you open the HSA account, not when you put in money. So you could keep
your receipts for medical costs now and reimburse yourself whenever you
can make deposits.
* Compound the interest
Most people keep their HSA money in cash via a checking-type account,
but if you have any significant balance at all, you can invest the money
and let the magic of compounding work for you. Ten years from now, your
$1,000 could be worth $1,790 if you put it in an index fund that earns 6
percent, and that gain would be tax-free.
"We want it to be a longer-term vehicle, so removing the account is
counter to that," said Eric Dowley, senior vice president of Fidelity's
HSA division.
Fidelity generally treats HSAs like it does IRAs and does not seek to
close low-balance accounts, he added.
* Move the account to a friendlier bank
If you got one of those scary letters saying your HSA was about to be
seized and your financial institution does not seem happy about keeping
a dormant account, shop around and pay close attention to fees.
* Spend the money
If you close your HSA and withdraw the funds that are left, you will
have to pay taxes and fees that could eat up your whole balance.
Instead, you could just spend the money on qualified expenses like
contact lenses or prescriptions, and then close the emptied account.
(Editing by Lauren Young and Lisa Von Ahn)
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