On October 12, an executive order was signed that, among other
things, seeks to expand Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs). HRAs are just
one type of tax-advantaged account you can provide your employees to help fund
their health care expenses. Also available are Health Savings Accounts (HSAs)
and Flexible Spending Accounts (FSAs). Which one should you include in your
benefits package? Here’s a look at the similarities and differences:
HRA. An HRA is an
employer-sponsored account that reimburses employees for medical expenses.
Contributions are excluded from taxable income and there’s no government-set
limit on their annual amount. But only you as the employer can contribute to an
HRA; employees aren’t allowed to contribute.
Also, the Affordable Care Act puts some limits on how HRAs can
be offered. The October 12 executive order directs the Secretaries of the
Treasury, Labor, and Health and Human Services to consider proposing regs or
revising guidance to “increase the usability of HRAs,” expand the ability of
employers to offer HRAs to their employees, and “allow HRAs to be used in
conjunction with nongroup coverage.”
HSA. If you provide employees
a qualified high-deductible health plan (HDHP), you can also sponsor HSAs for
them. Pretax contributions can be made by both you and the employee. The 2017
contribution limits (employer and employee combined) are $3,400 for self-only
coverage and $6,750 for family coverage. The 2018 limits are $3,450 and $6,900,
respectively. Plus, for employees age 55 or older, an additional $1,000 can be
contributed.
The employee owns the account, which can bear interest or be
invested, growing tax-deferred similar to an IRA. Withdrawals for qualified
medical expenses are tax-free, and employees can carry over a balance from year
to year.
FSA. Regardless of whether you
provide an HDHP, you can sponsor FSAs that allow employees to redirect pretax
income up to a limit you set (not to exceed $2,600 in 2017 and expected to
remain the same for 2018). You, as the employer, can make additional
contributions, generally either by matching employer contributions up to 100%
or by contributing up to $500. The plan pays or reimburses employees for
qualified medical expenses.
What employees don’t use by the plan year’s end, they generally
lose — though you can choose to have your plan allow employees to roll over up
to $500 to the next year or give them a 2 1/2-month grace period to incur
expenses to use up the previous year’s contribution. If employees have an HSA,
their FSA must be limited to funding certain “permitted” expenses.
If you’d like to offer your employees a tax-advantaged way to
fund health care costs but are unsure which type of account is best for your
business and your employees, please contact us. We can provide the additional
details you need to make a sound decision.
© 2017
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