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IRS Announces 2022 Limits for HSAs and High-Deductible Health Plans

Separately, HHS released annual out-of-pocket limits for ACA-compliant plans

Health savings account (HSA) contribution limits for 2022 are going up $50 for self-only coverage and $100 for family coverage, the IRS announced May 10, giving employers that sponsor high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) plenty of time to prepare for open enrollment season later this year.

The annual limit on HSA contributions will be $3,650 for self-only and $7,300 for family coverage. That’s about a 1.4 percent increase from this year.

In Revenue Procedure 2021-25, the IRS confirmed HSA contribution limits effective for calendar year 2022, along with minimum deductible and maximum out-of-pocket expenses for the HDHPs with which HSAs are paired.

“For HSA-qualified insurance plans, the minimum deductibles will remain the same as for 2021, but the annual out-of-pocket maximums will increase slightly for 2022,” said Roy Ramthun, president and founder of HSA Consulting Services. This means health plans do not need to substantially change their plan designs for 2022.

Contribution and Out-of-Pocket Limits
for Health Savings Accounts and High-Deductible Health Plans
2022 2021 Change
HSA contribution limit (employer + employee) Self-only: $3,650
Family: $7,300
Self-only: $3,600
Family: $7,200
Self-only: +$50
Family: +$100
HSA catch-up contributions (age 55 or older) $1,000 $1,000 No change
HDHP minimum deductibles Self-only: $1,400
Family: $2,800
Self-only: $1,400
Family: $2,800
No change
No change
HDHP maximum out-of-pocket amounts (deductibles, co-payments and other amounts, but not premiums) Self-only: $7,050
Family: $14,100
Self-only: $7,000
Family: $14,000
Self-only: +$50
Family: +$100
Source: IRS, Revenue Procedure 2021-25.

Adjustments Reflect Inflation

Contribution limits for various tax-advantaged accounts for the following year are usually announced in October, “except for HSAs, which come out in the latter part of April or May,” explained Harry Sit, CEBS, who writes The Finance Buff blog. The contribution limits are adjusted for inflation (rounded to the nearest $50) annually, using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for the 12-month period ending on March 31. The catch-up contribution amount, however, is fixed by statute.

“The family coverage numbers happened to be twice the individual coverage numbers in recent years but it isn’t always true,” Sit pointed out. “Because the individual coverage limit and the family coverage limit are both rounded to the nearest $50, when one number rounds up and the other number rounds down, the family coverage limit can be slightly more or slightly less than twice the individual coverage limit.”

Catch-Up and Family Member Contributions

HSA holders age 55 or older by the end of the year—not age 50, as with 401(k) and individual retirement account (IRA) catch-up contributions—can contribute an additional $1,000 to their HSAs.

However, “because an HSA is in one individual’s name, just like an IRA—there is no joint HSA even when you have family coverage—only the person age 55 or older can contribute the additional $1,000 in his or her own name,” Sit said. If only one spouse is 55 or older but the younger spouse contributes the full family contribution limit to the HSA in his or her name, the older spouse has to open a separate account to make the additional $1,000 catch-up contribution. If both spouses are age 55 or older, “they must have two HSA accounts in separate names if they want to contribute the maximum,” Sit noted.

Another point about family contributions: “If your HDHP also covers your adult children who are not claimed as a dependent on your tax return, they can also contribute to an HSA in their own name if they don’t have other non-HDHP coverage,” Sit added, however “they will have to open an HSA on their own with an HSA provider.”

ACA’s Limits Differ

There are two sets of limits on out-of-pocket expenses for health plans, determined annually by federal agencies, which can be a source of confusion for plan administrators.

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) establishes annual out-of-pocket or cost-sharing limits under the ACA for essential health benefits covered under an ACA-compliant plan, excluding grandfathered plans.

On April 30, HHS released the Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters final rule for 2022, published in the May 5 Federal Register. According to an HHS press release, the annual payment notice makes regulatory changes in the individual and small-group health insurance markets, and outlines parameters and requirements issuers need to design plans and set rates for the upcoming plan year.

The HHS’s annual out-of-pocket limits are higher than those set by the IRS, but to qualify as an HSA-compatible HDHP, a plan must not exceed the IRS’s lower out-of-pocket maximums.

Below is a comparison of the two sets of limits:

2022 2021
Out-of-pocket limits for ACA-compliant plans (HHS) Self-only: $8,700

Family: $17,400

Self-only: $8,550

Family: $17,100

Out-of-pocket limits for HSA-qualified HDHPs (IRS) Self-only: $7,050Family: $14,100 Self-only: $7,000Family: $14,000

 

The HHS final out of pocket (OOP) limit includes the plan’s deductible and cost sharing for essential health benefits (EHBs) under the ACA, wrote Mark Holloway, senior vice president and director of compliance services at Lockton Companies, a benefits broker and services firm. “Self-insured plans and large-group insured plans are not required to cover all EHBs (although small-group insured plans are), but to the extent the plans do cover an EHB … OOP expenses for in-network EHBs must accumulate against the maximum OOP limit” and the plan may not impose annual or lifetime dollar limits on EHBs.

Non-grandfathered plans must apply the individual OOP limit to everyone, whether they are enrolled in self-only or family coverage, Holloway explained. “This requires each enrollee to have his or her own individual OOP limit on essential health benefits that is no higher than the maximum self-only OOP limit.”

He added, “A plan would violate the ACA maximum OOP limit provision during its 2022 plan year unless it applied an OOP limit no higher than $8,700 to each individual enrolled as part of a family and, in addition, applied an overall OOP limit to the family no higher than $17,400.”

Excepted Benefit HRA Limit Unchanged

IRS Revenue Procedure 2021-25 also states that the maximum amount that employers may contribute for excepted benefit health reimbursement arrangements (excepted benefit HRAs) for plans years beginning in 2022 will remain at $1,800.

Employers use excepted benefit HRAs to help cover the cost of employees’ vision, dental, or short-term, limited-duration insurance plan premiums.

Tax code regulations provide that, for each plan year, amounts newly made available to excepted benefit HRAs cannot exceed $1,800. For plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2020, the $1,800 amount is adjusted for inflation by an amount equal to $1,800 multiplied by the applicable cost-of-living adjustment. Any increase that’s not a multiple of $50 is rounded down to the next lowest multiple of $50.

Because of this indexing methodology, the maximum new-contribution amount for an excepted benefit HRA remained at $1,800 for 2021 and will do so again for the 2022 plan year.

Contributing to the HSA Cap Pays Off

Making payroll contributions up to the annual HSA limit, when participants are able to do so, can provide extra savings to pay for post-retirement health care.

According to Fidelity Investments, which manages retirement accounts and HSAs, a 65-year old couple retiring this year can expect to spend $300,000 in health care and medical expenses throughout retirement, even when enrolled in Medicare. For single retirees, the 2021 estimate is $157,000 for women and $143,000 for men.

“We continue to see many HSA owners not using these accounts to their full potential, in particular not using the power of investing to potentially grow their savings. And that’s the step that can make a big difference, especially for younger people with time on their side,” said Hope Manion, senior vice president at Fidelity Workplace Consulting.

At the start of the year, 16.5 percent of Fidelity HSAs had at least some funds invested in mutual funds, an increase from 11.2 percent at the beginning of 2020.

Fidelity calculates that a couple who contributes the maximum family limit to an HSA, withdraws 50 percent each year to pay for current qualified medical expenses but leaves the remaining 50 percent invested and earning an average 7 percent return, would have the potential to grow the account to $300,000 after about 25 years, reaching nearly half a million dollars after 30 years.

Educate Employees on FICA Savings

HSAs are one of the only tax-advantaged accounts that exclude contributions not only from income tax but also from FICA payroll taxes, noted Voya Financial, which manages HSAs and retirement plan accounts.

The FICA tax rate for both employers and employees is 7.65 percent, of which 6.2 percent helps to fund Social Security while the remaining 1.45 percent goes to Medicare.

“Even pretax 401(k) contributions are still subject to FICA taxes,” unlike HSAs, Voya pointed out. “And though IRA contributions can be described as ‘before-tax,’ employees have already paid FICA taxes on those contributions.”

Reposted with permission from SHRM 05.2021

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