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"Value of HSA on Last Day of the Year" but no 5498-SA. How else can I find this information?

I have always received a 1099 SA. I entered my W2 which lists contribution to HSA  and my 1099 SA and then was asked for value of HSA on last day of the year.  I've had an HSA for a couple years and never been asked that so I tried researching. Everything keeps saying a 5498 SA which I haven't received and never have previously. I also see a lot of suggestions to "log onto account and 'get value'". Logged into my HSA account and it says 5498's are not available until Mid June. How do I "get the value" or how else can I get this information?

Is it different than the balance of my HSA at the end of the year? I used almost all of my HSA this year on medical expenses if that matters. I left this field at zero currently.

 
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3 Replies
BillM223
Employee Tax Expert

"Value of HSA on Last Day of the Year" but no 5498-SA. How else can I find this information?

You will read that you are not required to enter anything from the 5498-SA into TurboTax. This is true.

 

The fact that you were asked what the value of your HSA was at the end of the year, means that you had excess HSA contributions that you are carrying over to next year. Is that right?

 

If is not the case, come back and we will step through your situation. Taxpayers often makes entries that make TurboTax think that they made excess contributions.

 

But, if indeed, you need to report the value of your HSA at the end of the year, I don't see why you can't call your HSA custodian and just ask them.

 

 

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"Value of HSA on Last Day of the Year" but no 5498-SA. How else can I find this information?

I've looked on my online account and verified the total contributions did not exceed $4150. Maybe you are right that I tripped up a question in error?

BillM223
Employee Tax Expert

"Value of HSA on Last Day of the Year" but no 5498-SA. How else can I find this information?

This a long answer that contains pearls of wisdom drawn from answering HSA questions here for 9 years. So have patience and read through the entire thing, and if you still have questions, then come back and give us your numbers.

 

Your annual HSA contribution limit is what determines if you made an overcontribution or not.

 

The annual HSA contribution is dependent on the base amount, insurance status (Family versus Self-only), how many months you were covered by an HDHP policy, whether or not you carried over excess contributions from the previous year (this reduces the current year's limit), and other less common situations.

 

Generally, if you made contributions (this includes what your employer contributed) that appear to be clearly under the limit, and the entire amount of the contributions is considered by TurboTax to be in excess, then the cause is that the taxpayer has not gone through the HSA interview in TurboTax, which allows TurboTax to calculate the HSA limit for the current year.

 

Note that you would owe a 6% excise tax on the carryover of the excess contribution ONLY if you do not withdraw the excess before April 15, 2025. Therefore, if you really made an excess contribution, you can "fix" this by contacting the HSA custodian to withdraw the excess that TurboTax indicates. Do this before April 15th.

 

But I would try to address the excess issue first, because it is easy to accidently indicate to TurboTax that you made excess contributions by mis-entries or lack of entries.

 

Here is an updated list of possibilities:

There are several major culprits for excess contributions (other than just actually contributing more than the limit). 

 

First, if you did not complete the HSA interview - that is, go all the way until you are returned to the "Your Tax Breaks" page - the limit still might be set to zero, causes a misleading excess contribution message. 

 

There are questions all the way to the end of the interview that affect the annual contribution limit.

 

Second, it is not unusual for taxpayers to accidentally duplicate their contributions by mistakenly entering what they perceive to be "their" contributions into the second line on the "Let's enter your HSA contributions" screen.

 

Normally, any employee who made contributions to his/her HSA through a payroll deduction plan has the contributions included in the amount with code "W" in box 12 on the W-2. This is on the first line on this screen (above). Don't enter the code W amount anywhere on the return other than on the W-2 page.

 

Third, if you weren't in HDHP coverage all 12 months, then the annual contribution limit is reduced on a per month ratio. NOTE, this means that you have to indicate when and under what type of HDHP plan you had. Be sure to answer the questions on the screen entitled "Was [name] covered by a High Deductible Health Plan in 2024?".

 

Fourth, if you had a carryover of excess contributions from 2023, then this carryover is applied to 2024 as a reduction to the 2024 HSA contribution limit, which could cause an excess condition in 2024 as well. But note: if you had an excess contribution in 2023 but cured it by withdrawing the excess in early 2023, then do NOT report an "overfunding" on your 2024 return.

 

Fifth, the Family limit ($8,300) is for the aggregate of contributions by both taxpayers, even if both taxpayers have their own HSAs. That is, one taxpayer can’t contribute $8,300 to his/her HSA and the other contribute $4,150 to the other HSA – the $8,300 limit applies to the aggregate of all HSA contributions credited to the family (in this case, the excess contributions would be $4,150).

 

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