Medical savings account

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A medical savings account (MSA) is an account where tax-deferred deposits can be made for medical expenses. Withdrawals from the MSA are tax-free if used to pay for medical expenses. Typically, a MSA is coupled with a high-deductible health plan (HDHP). Withdrawals from the MSA go toward paying the deductible in a given year. If the deductible is met in that year, the high-deductible policy will pay the remaining medical expenses for that year. If there are funds remaining in the account at the end of the year, the funds can either roll over into the account for the following year or can be withdrawn as taxable income.

Contents

History

The idea of the MSA appears to have come from health care analysts that were concerned about the problem of "overinsurance." They reasoned that overinsurance was raising the cost of health care expenses. They further reasoned that if patients (as opposed to third-party payers) paid their own medical expenses, the cost of health care would decrease.

During the early 1990s, think tanks like the National Center for Policy Analysis in Dallas, TX and insurance companies like Golden Rule Insurance Company in Indianapolis, IN began to promote the passage of a MSA law that would allow for contributions to the savings account to be tax-free. Even though the US Congress was under Republican control and even though the MSA was central to the Republican's health care agenda, a federal MSA law failed to materialize during the 1990s. However, Congress did pass a MSA pilot as a part of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) in 1996. In the meantime, some states did pass MSA legislation during the 1990s. Missouri was the first state to do so in 1993. By 1998 25 states had some form of MSA legislation offering a state tax break to those that would open a MSA.

For you are not a self-employed person, or working for a self-employed person, you can still setup a medical savings account, see health savings account.

The MSA for the self-employed person or business is now called an 'Archer MSA' by the USA Internal Revenue service, 'IRS'.


DESCRIPTION PURPOSES ONLY

The following is not intended as legal or financial advice, it is merely a recount of some information contained in the IRS publication cited below, see your accountant for more information.

Advantages

This plan for the self-employed essentially exists to fund a tax exempt account for medical expenses incurred before an associated 'high deductible' insurance plan begins to cover those expenses. This allows the self-employed to buy a "catastrophic" insurance plan at much lower monthly premiums, and still cover medical expenses out of their personal MSA account with tax exempt contributions the individual account holder made to that account. The risk is that an MSA account holder may find that their medical expenses out strip the contributions they can afford to make. The advantage is that you can invest any money added to the account, so accumulated amounts contributed over the deductible level may grow tax free. This account may be convertible into a standard IRA savings plan after a specified age threshold is reached.

You can treat premiums for your long-term care coverage, health care coverage while you receive unemployment benefits, or your health care continuation coverage, required under any federal law, as qualified medical expenses which can be paid out of your Archer MSA.

Purpose

The Archer MSA is intended to be used by self-employed individuals and their few employees running a small business who are eligible to participate in the plan. These individuals will be on the pioneering edge of health care cost management, since this plan is entirely self-directed, including its initial setup, and compliance with the plan thresholds.

Source

The MSA is generally a defined trust account that is set up solely as an IRS related tax exempt financial instrument for medical expense purposes.

See current IRS Publication 969.

However, after a contributor attains a certain age, current IRS provisions allow this account to be maintained as a standard IRA retirement account. This is worth looking into from a maximum contribution standpoint.

Health Care Cost Management

A High deductible health plan (HDHP), has much lower monthly premiums, but much higher out of pocket expenses. An Archer MSA is only available in tandem with an HDHP offered in your state.

Limits

The following limits for annual deductibles and the maximum out-of-pocket expenses for high deductible health plans for 2005 are set as a range. The range of Minimum, and Maximum coverage, as well as annual deductible out-of-pocket expenses are currently listed in IRS Publication 969 as:

Self-only deductible Minimum $1,750; Maximum $2,650; Maximum out-of-pocket expenses $3,500.

Family deductible Minimum $3,500; Maximum $5,250; Maximum out-of-pocket expenses $6,450.

Under the MSA the yearly contributions are based on the insurance plan deductible it is tied to. This minimum is set by the required insurance policy with a Non-deductible level amount of at least $5000.

Qualifications

There are very specific qualifications to be met before making any contributions and a worksheet in the IRS Form 8853 instructions is where part of that is performed.

Tracking

IRS Form 1099MSA and Form 8853 are used to report some annual transactions related to your Medical Savings Account.

According to IRS you should receive Form 5498-SA, HSA, Archer MSA, or Medicare Advantage MSA Information, from the trustee (bank or other financial institution) showing the amount you (or your employer) contributed during the year. You should receive your employer’s contributions, if any, also.

Elements of Plan Setup

A couple of important elements in setting up a self-employed MSA plan are a trust account set up at a financial institution, and a High deductible health plan (HDHP) with the deductible set within the IRS MSA deductible and out of pocket expense amounts.

Reference

  • Health Decisions - Informative resource relating to MSAs, FSAs, and HSAs which includes news, an online library, and original content.