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MichaelW
New Member

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

I had a distribution from a previous HSA from a different employer, but that HSA is now closed. Did this confuse TurboTax?

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My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

The problem is that you were not eligible to receive an HSA contribution in December 2016, because you were not in an HDHP on December 1, 2016.

To quote the IRS on eligibility:

"To be an eligible individual and qualify for an HSA, you must meet the following requirements.

  • You are covered under a high deductible health plan (HDHP), described later, on the first day of the month.
  • You have no other health coverage except what is permitted under Other health coverage, later.
  • You aren’t enrolled in Medicare.
  • You can’t be claimed as a dependent on someone else's 2016 tax return."

See IRS Publication 969 at https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p969.pdf.

While you are principally responsible for determining your eligibility for HSA contributions, your employer has the responsibility to ensure that you are covered by an HDHP. Well, you were on December 28, 2016, but the employer should have reasonably known that you couldn’t be eligible for the HSA until January 1, 2017.

IRS Notice 2004-50 -

“Q-81. Are employers who contribute to an employee’s HSA responsible for determining whether the employee is an eligible individual and the employee’s maximum annual contribution limit?

A-81. Employers are only responsible for determining the following with respect to an employee’s eligibility and maximum annual contribution limit on HSA contributions: (1) whether the employee is covered under an HDHP (and the deductible) or low deductible health plan or plans (including health FSAs and HRAs) sponsored by that employer; and (2) the employee’s age (for catch-up contributions). The employer may rely on the employee’s representation as to his or her date of birth.”

Clearly, you weren’t covered on December 1st, so I suggest that you visit the HR department and ask them why they made the contribution on December 28, 2016, instead of waiting 4 days until 2017 when it would have been OK.

Hopefully, they will find a way to recharacterize their contribution to year 2017 or some other accounting mechanism to relieve you of the penalty.

View solution in original post

9 Replies

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

Was your previous HDHP covering you on December 1, 2016?
MichaelW
New Member

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

No. I had no health coverage on December 1st, 2016.

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

The problem is that you were not eligible to receive an HSA contribution in December 2016, because you were not in an HDHP on December 1, 2016.

To quote the IRS on eligibility:

"To be an eligible individual and qualify for an HSA, you must meet the following requirements.

  • You are covered under a high deductible health plan (HDHP), described later, on the first day of the month.
  • You have no other health coverage except what is permitted under Other health coverage, later.
  • You aren’t enrolled in Medicare.
  • You can’t be claimed as a dependent on someone else's 2016 tax return."

See IRS Publication 969 at https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p969.pdf.

While you are principally responsible for determining your eligibility for HSA contributions, your employer has the responsibility to ensure that you are covered by an HDHP. Well, you were on December 28, 2016, but the employer should have reasonably known that you couldn’t be eligible for the HSA until January 1, 2017.

IRS Notice 2004-50 -

“Q-81. Are employers who contribute to an employee’s HSA responsible for determining whether the employee is an eligible individual and the employee’s maximum annual contribution limit?

A-81. Employers are only responsible for determining the following with respect to an employee’s eligibility and maximum annual contribution limit on HSA contributions: (1) whether the employee is covered under an HDHP (and the deductible) or low deductible health plan or plans (including health FSAs and HRAs) sponsored by that employer; and (2) the employee’s age (for catch-up contributions). The employer may rely on the employee’s representation as to his or her date of birth.”

Clearly, you weren’t covered on December 1st, so I suggest that you visit the HR department and ask them why they made the contribution on December 28, 2016, instead of waiting 4 days until 2017 when it would have been OK.

Hopefully, they will find a way to recharacterize their contribution to year 2017 or some other accounting mechanism to relieve you of the penalty.

MichaelW
New Member

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

Thank you for your helpful response. However, I have reason to believe they may make a similar contribution again in 2017. So if they recharacterize they 12/28/2016 contribution to 2017, then they might not make the contribution later in 2017 that they otherwise would have. In this case, I would be better off accepting the penalty for 2016 and not doing anything that might jeopardize a subsequent employer contribution in 2017. Half a loaf (more like 3/4) is better than none.
dmertz
Level 15

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

Accepting the penalty for 2016 will not allow you to contribute more for 2017.  You also have to report the HSA contribution as 2016 income.  To avoid another 6% on this same $3,000 for 2017, the $3,000 excess from 2016 will have to be applied as a contribution for 2017, reducing the additional amount that your employer can contribute for 2017 to $400.  Accepting the penalty will therefore do nothing but needlessly throw away $180 for the penalty.

If you fail to remain HSA-contribution eligible through at least 11 months of 2017, things get even worse since you won't even be able to apply the full $3,000 excess as a 2017 contribution.  Under these circumstances, to avoid any excess contribution for 2017 you would need to take a taxable distribution from the HSA of the amount of the remaining excess.  This would be the second time this money is taxed.  If you are under age 65 at the time of this distribution, the distribution is also subject to a 20% early-distribution penalty.  In other words, accepting the penalty for 2016 can potentially lead to much greater penalties down the road.
MichaelW
New Member

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

I family HDHP coverage, so I think my maximum contribution limit is $6,750.00. Does that change your recommendation? Thank you.
dmertz
Level 15

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

It doesn't materially change my comment, it just means that you would only have to have family HSA coverage for 6 months of 2017 instead of 11 months to be able to apply all $3,000 of the excess as a 2017 contribution.  That's the only change.
MichaelW
New Member

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

The account administrator stated I have the option of completing a retraction form. I gather this means I retract the contribution and it would come back to me as normal income. I imagine this would be taxed accordingly but I wonder if the taxation in this scenario would be less onerous than in the above-described scenarios.
dmertz
Level 15

My HDHP effective date was 12/21/2016. On 12/28, my employer made a $3000.00 contribution to my HSA. I contributed zero. Turbo Tax says I owe about an extra $700.00 now.

It's taxable income to you even if not returned.  There is nothing to be gained by accepting the penalty.
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