Key Takeaways
- A Flexible Spending Account (FSA) allows you to contribute up to $3,200 in pretax money to pay for out-of-pocket medical expenses in 2024. This amount increased from $3,050 for 2023.
- The money used to fund your FSA can be taken from your paycheck before taxes are deducted. As a result, you do not pay federal taxes on that money.
- If you fail to spend the amount in your FSA account by the end of the tax year or early in the following year, you may forfeit the unspent funds.
- You may have until March 15 of the following year to use your FSA funds from the previous year if your employer takes advantage of an option provided by the IRS.
Flexible spending account basics
An FSA is only available as part of an employee benefit package, so if your company offers FSAs, taking advantage of it could prove to be very rewarding. These accounts allow you to use pretax dollars to pay out-of-pocket medical expenses.
You can use the money to pay for medical copayments and deductibles, as well as certain other covered medical and dental expenses.
For example, you can use FSA funds to buy:
- prescription medications
- over-the-counter medicines
- medical supplies like bandages
- medical equipment like crutches and blood-testing kits
Funding a flexible spending account
Get your FSA started by enrolling with your employer's benefits office and determining how much you want to put into the fund.
- The maximum amount you can put into an FSA in 2024 is $3,200. This amount increased from $3,050 for 2023.
When you participate in this benefit, your employer deducts an amount from your paycheck every month to fund your FSA. Generally, the enrollment does not continue automatically from one year to the next, so remember to sign up each year if you want to continue this benefit.
TurboTax Tip:
The IRS permits employers to elect to let their employees rollover up to $500 in unspent FSA money into the following year.
Tax savings for flexible spending accounts
Since the money used to fund your FSA is pretax—taken from your paycheck to reduce your taxable income—you save whatever percentage you would have paid on that money in federal taxes.
Let's say that you earn $50,000 a year. If you sign up for the FSA benefit and contribute $2,000 into an FSA account, if your tax rate is 30%, you would have a tax savings of $600.
Use it or lose it
On the other hand, you don't want to think of the FSA as a savings account. It is a medical benefit intended to finance your annual out-of-pocket medical expenses. You may lose whatever amount is left unspent in the account at the end of the year or early in the following year.
The use-it-or-lose-it rule is not carved in stone, however. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) offers employers the option to allow employees until March 15 of the following year to use FSA funds from the previous year.
The IRS also permits employers to let their employees rollover up to $500 in unspent FSA money into the following year. These are not rules, but options available to employers, so check your company's policies.
The Consolidated Appropriations Act (CAA) was signed into law on December 27, 2020 as a stimulus measure to provide relief to those affected by the pandemic. For tax years 2020 and 2021, the CAA allows employers to provide a grace period of up to 12 months into to following plan year for carrying over unused healthcare and dependent care FSA balances.
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