I saw in TT the question if my employers HSA contributions were put into my wifes HS account. I always thought only I could have HSA account and that contribution limits were family limits? Anyhow, my wife does not work anymore, she is on my employer medical plan (high deductible) - can she have an additional HSA on her own, so we can put more money aside for medical cost?
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There is no employment or income requirement for making an HSA contribution. Since your spouse is covered by your HDHP plan through your employer, she can make a contribution to her own HSA.
The $6,750 contribution limit for having family HDHP coverage will be split between the two of you, so unless she was age 55 or older during the tax year and therefore can make a catch-up contribution for herself, you won't be able to increase the combined amount contributed to HSAs. If she was age 55 or older in the tax year, she can also make a $1,000 catch-up contribution (or some fraction thereof if you are not eligible for an entire year's contribution) to her own HSA.
There is no employment or income requirement for making an HSA contribution. Since your spouse is covered by your HDHP plan through your employer, she can make a contribution to her own HSA.
The $6,750 contribution limit for having family HDHP coverage will be split between the two of you, so unless she was age 55 or older during the tax year and therefore can make a catch-up contribution for herself, you won't be able to increase the combined amount contributed to HSAs. If she was age 55 or older in the tax year, she can also make a $1,000 catch-up contribution (or some fraction thereof if you are not eligible for an entire year's contribution) to her own HSA.
Does this apply even when the husband is on Part A Medicare but continuing to work? It is understood that contribution to his HSA must be zero. In other words, can they both still be covered by a HDHP through his employer and she open an HSA in her name and make her "individual" contributions to it along with her makeup (being over 55) contribution?
@Anonymous wrote:
Does this apply even when the husband is on Part A Medicare but continuing to work? It is understood that contribution to his HSA must be zero. In other words, can they both still be covered by a HDHP through his employer and she open an HSA in her name and make her "individual" contributions to it along with her makeup (being over 55) contribution?
Yes, it's still true. As long as you are covered by a qualifying HDHP and you are not covered by other insurance, you can contribute to an HSA. In this case, since it is a family HDHP, you can contribute up to the maximum for a family HSA. Even though your spouse is the named insurance holder but is disqualified for having other coverage at the same time (since his other coverage does not cover you.)
Thanks for the link to the IRS Doc on the matter. It's distorted on your post so I'm posting it cleared up here: https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p969.pdf
I'm a few years late to this particular thread. As I understand the replies, a non-working spouse can have her own HSA while qualifying through husband's HDHP and must share the maximum contribution limit but both can contribute an additional $1000 if over age 55.
Will the tax benefit be affected by only half being contributed by the husband through payroll deduction or will it all come out in the wash at the time of filing a tax return?
No, it does not matter if the contribution comes from an employer contribution or out-of-pocket. You can maximize the contribution limit if you are both over the age of 55 by each spouse having their own HSA. Then, your contribution limit for the family becomes $9,200. As long as at least $1,000 is deposited into each HSA, the remainder of the contribution as well as whether it was an employer contribution or out-of-pocket does not matter for tax purposes.
Your understanding is correct. About your question regarding the effects of contributions being made via payroll deduction, it doesn't matter how you make the contribution. Just when, and how much you are allowed to contribute. What makes a difference in your taxable income is how much you contribute to the HSA, with in what is allowed per person, per age and income. For example, you can't contribute more than what you earn. You can contribute an extra $1000 when you are 55 and over, etc.
If your husband is only contributing a fraction of what is allowed, and you would like to contribute more, you can make the contributions manually. You can even wait until you know what your tax liability will be and make the additional contribution by April 15, Tax Day, same as with an IRA contribution. https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p969.pdf
@Big0taxes wrote:
I'm a few years late to this particular thread. As I understand the replies, a non-working spouse can have her own HSA while qualifying through husband's HDHP and must share the maximum contribution limit but both can contribute an additional $1000 if over age 55.
Will the tax benefit be affected by only half being contributed by the husband through payroll deduction or will it all come out in the wash at the time of filing a tax return?
There is a slightly larger benefit for the spouse who uses payroll deductions.
To confirm your setup question, yes, as long as the spouse is covered by an HSA-eligible HDHP, and does not have other disqualifying coverage, the spouse can contribute to an HSA. The spouse does not have to be the owner of the plan, they just have to be covered. If the spouse does not have an employer sponsored plan, there are many banks that will open a private HSA, usually for a small monthly fee.
If the spouses have a family HDHP, the contribution limit is $7200 for 2021 and $7300 for 2022. This can be split in any convenient way, but not more than the combined total. Each spouse who is age 55 or older is also allowed a $1000 catch-up contribution, but this is individual and specific.
If the non-working spouse makes after-tax contributions, they will get a tax deduction on their federal and (most) state tax returns. If the working spouse makes contributions via payroll deduction, the working spouse gets a reduction in taxable income which will save the same amount of federal and state income tax as the deduction, assuming the spouses file a joint tax return. However, payroll contributions also reduce your taxable income for social security and medicare tax purposes, so payroll contributions save about 7.65% more than after-tax contributions.
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