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Informative Articles

Funding Your Retirement: The 401K and 403B Way
Saving for your retirement doesn't have to be a nightmare as long as you are aware of your options. For now, we're focusing on 401K and 403B retirement plans. These two plans are essentially the same except that for-profit companies use 401Ks and...

How To Invest Wisely And Make Your Money Grow
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Money management
There are a number of ways that people can use to manage money to stay out of debt and even establish savings over time. Establish a Budget The first, and maybe the most important step, is to set a budget for yourself and stick by it. Take...

The Big Lie: What Wall Street Does Not Want You to Know
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When to use Quicken for Mutual Fund Recordkeeping
While you might assume any mutual fund investor should use Quicken's mutual fund record-keeping tools, that isn't the case. Because investment record keeping, including mutual fund record keeping, requires significant work and involves...

 
A Health Savings Account Primer

Jenny Thomas heaved a sigh of relief. A month ago she checked into her local hospital to deliver her first child, but unanticipated complications necessitated an emergency surgery. Fortunately both she and the baby were fine. But if it hadn't been for her family's health savings account (HSA), she could have ended up owing the hospital tens of thousands of dollars.

An HSA is smart savings plan that you use for unanticipated medical expenses. Usually, money that you sock away into the plan comes out of your paycheck before payroll taxes are computed, so that you maximize your savings rate. Furthermore, any income that the HAS plan itself generates (such as from interest or investment appreciation) is also tax free, so it grows fast. Some employers even contribute extra matching cash to the plan to encourage you to save.

In most parts of the country, to be eligible for an HSA you also need to hold a High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP). An HDHP is a plan where the deductible - that is the amount that you pay out of pocket, before the insurance "kicks in" is somewhat higher that what you might have seen before: usually in the neighborhood of $2000 to $3000. The big idea behind the HSA/HDHP combo is that the premiums on the high-deductible plan are so much lower that even though you pay the first couple of thousand "out-of-pocket" - actually out of your HSA - you save money in the long run over a traditional plan.

Hundreds of banks, credit unions and insurance companies offer HSAs, and it's easy to sign up. Once you're enrolled, you can use the money in the account for most any approved medical, dental, vision or disability health care or expense.

HSA's differ from one another mostly in the ways they grow. Some HSA's grow like traditional savings accounts, with interest compounding daily. Other HSA's let you be more aggressive and pick money market funds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles so that you can maximize the growth of the account. It's up to you, and you should make sure you understand the investment choices available to you before you select your HSA institution. After you have opened an HSA, managing the account is pretty easy. You setup automatic deductions from your paycheck, usually totalling an annual amount less than your HDHP deductible. You then invest your accumulating HSA funds in interst-bearing accounts, stocks, bonds and/or mutual funds, depending on the choices available to you at your HSA institution. Returns on these investments are tax-free, so they compound fast! If, in some year, your don't use the cash, it automatically gets carried over to the next year. So in this way HSA's are different from "Flexible Spending Accounts" which typically follow a "use it or lose it" approach.

About the author:

Kurt Stammberger is VP, Marketing at Healthia Inc. Healthia provides integrated comparison-shopping health insurance related information on health care products and services, doctors and health insurance plans.