Consumer's choice: is a health savings account plan right for you?

AuthorAscierto, Jerry
PositionHEALTH INSURANCE

As health insurance costs continue to rise, health savings accounts may help bring those rates down to earth.

HSAs--tax-free savings accounts paired with high-deductible health plans--allow consumers to store money and spend it directly on the health care provider of their choice.

"The concept of HSAs is simply that people spend their own money more carefully than they spend the insurance company's money," says John Phillips, executive director of the Group Insurance Trust. "HSAs have the power to change behavior."

The HSA concept grew out of other consumer-driven health plans, such as flexible spending accounts and health reimbursement accounts. But unlike the use-it-or-lose-it FSA, an HSA can roll over each year. And unlike the HRA, employees can take their HSA with them if they leave the company.

"It's like having your health plan and retirement account wrapped into one," says Alexander Domaszewicz, a Newport Beach-based senior consultant with Mercer Human Resources Consulting. "It's like an IRA for health care."

HOW IT WORKS

Before setting up an HSA, consumers must have a health insurance policy with an annual deductible of at least $1,000 for an individual and $2,000 for a family. That policy is then coupled with a savings account offered through a financial institution.

Pre-tax dollars are placed in the account either by the employer, employee or both. The maximum contribution for 2005 is the lesser of the deductible of $2,650 for an individual or $5,250 for a family. The annual out-of-pocket maximum is $5,000 for an individual or $10,000 for a family, at which point, the insurance policy pays 100 percent of covered expenses.

Subject to rules established by the HSA account custodian, consumers have the option of investing the HSA in stocks, bonds or mutual funds in much the same way that 401(k) plans work. Any unused portion of the account grows tax-free.

Consumers then can spend the money on health care any way they see fit, without the restrictions of traditional health insurance or HMO coverage. The money is withdrawn tax-free to pay the full cost of every medical expense, from prescription drugs to CAT scans.

THE PROS

HSAs are expected to save companies money by making consumers primarily accountable for their health care decisions. High deductible plans cost companies about $600 less per employee per year than regular HMO coverage, according to Mercer.

"Folks who are willing to become more engaged in their health care are going...

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