Employers usually provide a interval of open enrollment within the fall, when their staff are allowed to select new well being plans, enroll in a Versatile Spending Account or make different modifications to their advantages. This yr, there are some modifications forward that might assist staff, whereas additionally probably opening up some monetary pitfalls.
Among the many greatest modifications for 2023 are with two tax-advantaged well being financial savings accounts — Versatile Spending Accounts (FSA) and Well being Financial savings Accounts (HSA). These accounts can save staff a pleasant chunk of change by permitting them to sock away pre-tax cash to pay for medical bills. Principally, you save what you'd have paid in taxes on cash you place within the accounts.
In 2023, staff can put away as a lot as $3,050 in an FSA, an enhance of about 7% from the present tax yr's cap of $2,850. In the meantime, single staff who wish to fund an HSA can save as much as $3,850 subsequent yr, a 5.5% enhance from 2022, whereas households can save as much as $7,750, up 6.2%.
- Social Safety declares greatest profit hike since 1981. This is whenever you'll get it.
- The IRS simply modified its tax brackets. That might decrease your taxes.
These will increase are useful at a time when inflation is at it highest in 4 many years, with shopper costs having jumped greater than 8% from a yr in the past. However there are a number of "gotchas" that staff want to pay attention to, particularly in the case of Versatile Spending Accounts, with the foremost being that FSAs are "use-it-or-lose-it" packages. In different phrases, for those who do not use all the cash you put aside, you may lose it — your employer retains any unused funds.
"Open enrollment usually opens in late October and early November," mentioned Lisa Myers, director of shopper providers, advantages accounts, at Willis Towers Watson. "Planning fastidiously is necessary, and figuring out the deadlines."
Certainly, U.S. staff find yourself forfeiting a complete of about $3 billion a yr in unused FSA funds, in keeping with an evaluation from Cash.
This is what to think about throughout open enrollment.
What is the distinction between an FSA and HSA?
Each accounts are geared toward serving to staff pay for medical bills with pre-tax cash. The largest distinction is that FSAs are managed by your employer, whereas HSAs are owned by the person.
That implies that for those who depart your job, your FSA will not transfer with you. However when you open and fund an HSA, that account does stick with you, like your 401(okay), which continues to be yours even after you permit a job and begin at a brand new employer.
One other huge distinction: Well being Financial savings Accounts are designed for folks with high-deductible well being care plans. Because of this not each worker can have entry to an HSA.
HSAs usually have extra flexibility than FSAs. As an example, unused funds roll over annually, not like with a FSA, the place funds are forfeited if not utilized by your employer's declare deadline. And you may change your contributions to your HSA at any time; with a FSA, contributions are set throughout open enrollment.
Can I enroll in each an FSA and HSA?
Usually, no, famous Myers of Willis Towers Watson. Nevertheless, folks with HSAs can go for a slimmed-down model of a Versatile Spending Account, referred to as a "restricted function FSA." These accounts can solely be used for imaginative and prescient and dental bills, which shrinks their usefulness.
Meaning staff who qualify for each packages will usually must determine whether or not it makes extra sense to fund both an FSA or an HSA for 2023.
How a lot ought to I put aside for 2023?
Some employers provide instruments to assist staff estimate their potential annual well being prices, however you may also take a look at your out-of-pocket medical bills for the previous yr to assist gauge your probably expenditures for the upcoming yr, Myers mentioned.
Individuals with HSAs additionally could wish to put aside the quantity that they're going to pay because of their well being plan deductible, since that is out-of-pocket spending that they might get reimbursed via that tax-advantaged account.
There's extra at stake for people who find themselves choosing FSAs, since overestimating your medical bills might depart cash sitting in your account that ultimately returns to your employer.
What deadlines ought to I pay attention to?
You may want to remain on high of the deadline for claiming your FSA funds.
Employers can provide staff a grace interval of as much as two and a half months after the top of a calendar yr to say the cash. However you may need to verify if your organization affords further time and mark in your calendar whenever you'll want to say the cash by.
Some staff could also be shocked by deadlines this yr as a result of a pandemic stimulus invoice and the IRS relaxed the foundations for claiming FSA funds, offering extra time for folks to file claims in 2020 and 2021. However these provisions have expired, which suggests folks with FSAs in 2022 should declare their cash by year-end or by an employer's grace interval in early 2023.
"That was momentary reduction because of the pandemic, so staff could have bigger than standard balances of their well being and dependent-care FSAs, and that they might forfeit going into 2023," Myers mentioned. "It is necessary to verify your balances, verify the plan guidelines, to allow them to plan their spending for the rest of 2022."
What can I spend my FSA cash on?
Workers are typically shocked at what their FSA plans will cowl, together with Band-Aids, studying glasses, first-aid kits and over-the-counter medication, Myers mentioned.
She recommends that individuals verify the FSAStore.com, which carries all FSA-eligible gadgets, particularly if you're getting near your deadline for claiming your funds and wish to make use of the cash.
Myers additionally advises that you simply verify your 2022 FSA stability and declare deadlines now, quite than ready till the top of the yr. Usually, a well being service or good should be bought in 2022 to qualify for a 2022 FSA declare, so ready till the final minute to attempt to spend the funds might enhance your danger of operating right into a barrier — comparable to in case your eye physician is booked up, which might hinder renewing your prescription to get new glasses.