Your HSA Is One of the Best Financial Accounts You're Probably Not Using

July 1, 2026

How You Can Cut Your Tax Bill Today and Build Value for Tomorrow


If you have a high-deductible health plan and you're not contributing to a Health Savings Account, you're leaving real money on the table every year.


That's not an exaggeration. An HSA is one of the most useful financial tools available to working adults, and most people either don't have one or aren't using it to its full potential.


Here's what you need to know.



What Is an HSA, Exactly?


An HSA is a health savings account tied to a high-deductible health plan (HDHP). You contribute money to it, and you can use those funds to pay for qualified medical expenses, like doctor visits, prescriptions, dental work, vision care, and more. You access the funds with a debit card tied to the account, or through reimbursements to your bank account.


But here's what makes it different from a basic savings account.



The Triple Tax Advantage


Financial professionals love to talk about this, and for good reason. HSAs are often described as triple tax-advantaged.


  1. Contributions are made with pre-tax dollars, meaning they come from your paycheck before taxes are assessed
  2. The money in the account grows tax-free through interest or investment earnings
  3. When funds are withdrawn for qualified medical expenses, those withdrawals are also tax-free


No other account in the U.S. tax code does all three of those things at once. Not a 401(k). Not a Roth IRA. Just an HSA.


Here's what that looks like in practice. If you're in the 24% federal tax bracket and contribute the full individual limit of $4,400 in 2026, you save $1,032 in federal income taxes alone. If you contribute through payroll deductions, you also avoid FICA taxes, saving an additional 7.65% on those contributions.


Your employer may also contribute to your HSA on your behalf, which makes it even better.



The Money Never Expires


This is the part that surprises most people. An HSA is nothing like a Flexible Spending Account (FSA), where you lose any unused funds at the end of the year. Unlike FSAs, HSA funds roll over from year to year with no expiration. You own the account, and it stays with you even if you change jobs. It's your money.


That means if you're in your 20s or 30s and relatively healthy, you can contribute every year and let that money grow for decades, then use it to cover medical expenses later in your life.



What You're Missing By Not Having One


If you have an HDHP and no HSA, here's a simple way to think about the cost of inaction.


Every dollar you put into an HSA reduces your taxable income. Every dollar that grows in the account does so tax-free. Every dollar you spend on qualified medical expenses comes out tax-free. If you're not contributing, you're paying more in taxes than you have to, and you're missing years of compounding growth on money you were going to spend on healthcare anyway.



It Can Work Like a Retirement Account


Here's the part most people miss entirely.


A family maxing out their HSA for 30 years could accumulate over $800,000 in tax-free medical money. That's a significant number.


One strategy worth knowing: pay your medical expenses out of pocket now, save your receipts, and let your HSA balance grow invested. There's no deadline for reimbursing yourself. You can reimburse yourself for past medical expenses at any time, as long as you save the receipts. That means years from now, after you have allowed the money in your HSA to grow via investments, you could pull tax-free cash from your HSA to cover expenses you paid out of pocket earlier in your life.


And after age 65, the rules get even more flexible. After age 65, you can withdraw HSA funds for any purpose without penalty. Non-medical withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income at that point, similar to a traditional IRA, but medical withdrawals remain completely tax-free.



How to Get Started


First, check whether your current health plan is HSA-eligible. Your plan documents or HR department can confirm this. If you have an HDHP, you can open an HSA through your employer's benefits platform or directly through many banks and financial institutions.


Start with whatever you can contribute, even if it's not the maximum. Set up automatic contributions if possible. And keep your receipts for any medical expenses you pay out of pocket.


The earlier you start, the more time your money has to grow.

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