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HSA eligibility

Greta
Level 9

I seem to recall that if you have ACA coverage, or Medicare, you are not eligible for HSA deductions. Is that true?

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PhilG_CPA
Level 3

If a taxpayer is enrolled in Medicare, no contributions to HSAs are allowable. For ACA coverage, I think it defaults to the normal limits for HDHP plans (deductible of $1,350 for individual or $2,700 for family in 2020). I'm not sure if HDHP plans are offered through the exchanges, but Medicare is a definite "No" for HSAs.

I drive a minivan.

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4 Comments 4
PhilG_CPA
Level 3

If a taxpayer is enrolled in Medicare, no contributions to HSAs are allowable. For ACA coverage, I think it defaults to the normal limits for HDHP plans (deductible of $1,350 for individual or $2,700 for family in 2020). I'm not sure if HDHP plans are offered through the exchanges, but Medicare is a definite "No" for HSAs.

I drive a minivan.
qbteachmt
Level 15

The coverage through the Marketplace has to be a HDHP to meet the HSA requirements. Just because it is through the marketplace or not has nothing to do with HSA. You are eligible for HSA deduction if your coverage plan is High Deductible and qualifies for HSA. In the Marketplace, you can select "HSA qualified" as a Filter, for shopping the plans.

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qbteachmt
Level 15

The 2020 minimum annual deductible is $1,400 for self-only HDHP coverage (up from $1,350 in 2019) and $2,800 for family HDHP coverage (up from $2,700 in 2019).

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PhilG_CPA
Level 3

Right you are on the limits. I had the wrong year in my response. Thanks!

I drive a minivan.
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