Funding postretirement medical expenses in today's marketplace is no small task, especially for the early retiree who has yet to qualify for Medicare coverage and may be reliant on an exchange-purchased health plan with a high deductible.
VEBAs and other similarly complex structures have existed for years to help to provide additional funding, but options have evolved so that clients now have more practical and accessible solutions. By putting a traditional retirement account to work with a health savings account (HSA), your clients can take advantage of a novel and tax-preferred funding approach at a time when more arcane funding structures may be going by the wayside.
The Rollover Strategy
Clients with high deductible health plans (HDHPs) may find themselves facing fairly substantial medical bills before their health coverage kicks in, which is where the HSA strategy works to provide tax-free funding. Bringing a traditional retirement account, such as an IRA, into the mix can help clients accumulate a substantial emergency fund for medical expenses within that HSA, which can be especially useful for your clients who plan to retire before the conventional retirement age.
Once in a lifetime, a client is permitted to make a tax-free rollover of funds from an IRA into an HSA. The rollover amount is limited to the annual contribution limit for HSAs ($3,300 for individuals and $6,550 for family coverage in 2014, plus an additional $1,000 catch-up for clients 55 and older) minus any contributions that the client has already made for the year.
The rollover itself is accomplished by contacting the IRA and HSA administrators, who will complete the transaction in a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer that is tax-free. Once rolled over into the HSA, the funds can be withdrawn tax-free in order to pay the client's medical expenses or can be permitted to grow with the rest of the HSA balance from year to year.
The client must remain enrolled in the HDHP for at least 12 months following the rollover, or the funds will be treated as though they were withdrawn directly from the IRA and will be subject to tax (and a potential additional 10% penalty if the client is not 59 ½ or older).
The Fine Print