HSA’s & HRA’s
I am aware that I can distribute funds from my TIRA to my HSA, but not to an HRA. From a tax implication standpoint, are there IRS restrictions that prohibit the following from occurring in the following scenarios:
A. An employee who is age 62, and not covered by Medicare, has an employer sponsored HSA with a High Deductible Healthcare Plan (HDHP). The employee has a family plan under which their spouse, who is age 66, who also has Medicare, is covered under the HSA HDHP family plan. Because it is an employee sponsored plan, is the spouse covered under the HSA for receiving distributions for authorized healthcare expenses even though she has Medicare?
B. If the scenario in A. above was altered in that the employee lost their job, elected to continue the same HDHP and its HSA under COBRA as a family plan,
1. Is COBRA still considered an employer sponsored plan?
2. Is the 66 year old spouse still eligible to receive HSA benefits under COBRA?
3. If not, even though it is classified as a family HDHP under COBRA, would the allowable monthly pro-rata contribution to the HSA, in effect, revert to a single plan or remain at the monthly pro-rata family plan contribution ceiling level?
C. If the scenario in A. above was altered in that the employee retired from the company, elected to continue with another HDHP with an HRA (not HSA), is the 66 year old spouse still eligible to receive HSA benefits under HRA?
IRS Publications 509 and 962 don’t quite appear in my search to address the scenarios above, and would appreciate your guidance, if possible.
Thank you.
Permalink Submitted by William Tuttle on Fri, 2017-01-27 16:38
You have a one time option to rollover funds from a traditional IRA to an HSA. It takes up HSA contribution space just like any other contribution.
Permalink Submitted by Jed Stander on Wed, 2017-02-01 02:07
Thank you for your expert and thorough answers. It was extreemly helpful in my sorting out the issues and answers. If you don’t mind, I have a follow-up question for you. It is, if the individual who is 62 years old in the three scenarios above also was enrolled and received Social Security at that time, would that alter any of the answers that you provided to me regarding either that person or their spouse’s ability to contribute to or receive benefits from the HSA and HRA? In short, the only variance is that the 62 year would be on Social Security.
Permalink Submitted by William Tuttle on Wed, 2017-02-01 15:41
Social Security in and of itself has no effect on HSAs. An HSA account owner can still make qualfied withdrawals for a spouse enrolled in SS regardless of whether they are or are not enrolled in Medicare. Also, provided they are covered by a QHDHP family plan and not otherwise disqualified by other non-QHDHP coverage (e.g. Medicare), they are themselves an HSA eligible individual. This would alow them to open their own HSA and make their own catch-up contribution.
Permalink Submitted by Jed Stander on Wed, 2017-02-01 22:04
Thank you so very much for your expert reply. I appreciate your going to the lengths to answer my questions! It is very, very helpful!!!