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HSA Contribution Limits 2026: Complete Rules & Strategies Guide

hsa contribution limits

Personal Finance Guide
2026 Edition
📅 Updated January 2026

HSA Contribution Limits 2026:
Complete Rules & Strategies Guide

Everything you need to know about the 2026 IRS limits, HDHP requirements, catch-up rules, and the new OBBBA changes โ€” all in one place.

A
Author Name, CFP
Fact-checked by SME Name, CPA

Published: June 2025  |  Last Updated: January 2026
🕒 14 min read

$4,400
Self-Only Limit

$8,750
Family Limit

+$1,000
Catch-Up (55+)

Apr 15, 2027
Contribution Deadline

⚡ Quick Answer

For 2026, the HSA contribution limit is $4,400 for self-only coverage and $8,750 for family coverage, as set by the IRS in Revenue Procedure 2025-19. Individuals age 55 or older can add a $1,000 catch-up contribution, bringing maximums to $5,400 and $9,750 respectively. These limits apply to all contributions combined โ€” yours plus your employer’s โ€” made to the account during the calendar year.

Key Takeaways

The 2026 HSA contribution limit is $4,400 for self-only HDHP coverage and $8,750 for family coverage โ€” up from $4,300 and $8,550 in 2025.

Individuals age 55 or older โ€” and not yet enrolled in Medicare โ€” may add a $1,000 catch-up contribution, for a total of $5,400 (self-only) or $9,750 (family).

Employer contributions count toward your annual limit โ€” if your employer contributes $1,200, your remaining personal contribution room for self-only coverage is only $3,200.

A qualifying HDHP for 2026 must have a minimum deductible of $1,700 (self-only) or $3,400 (family) and out-of-pocket maximums no higher than $8,500 / $17,000.

HSA contributions for tax year 2026 can be made until April 15, 2027 โ€” the tax-filing deadline.

Over-contributing triggers a 6% excise tax on the excess amount for every year it remains in the account. See exactly what happens and how to fix it →

New for 2026: The OBBBA expanded HSA eligibility to include certain Direct Primary Care Service Arrangements (DPCSAs) and made permanent telehealth flexibility for HDHPs.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute personalized tax or financial advice. Consult a qualified CPA, CFP, or benefits advisor for guidance specific to your situation.

1
What Are the HSA Contribution Limits for 2026?

The 2026 HSA contribution limits are $4,400 for self-only coverage and $8,750 for family coverage, as established by the IRS in Revenue Procedure 2025-19, issued in May 2025. These figures represent inflation-adjusted increases from the 2025 limits of $4,300 and $8,550, reflecting the IRS’s annual cost-of-living adjustment process under Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code.

Understanding these numbers is straightforward โ€” but getting them right matters. The limits are the ceiling for total contributions across all sources, meaning every dollar your employer puts into your account counts against the same cap as every dollar you contribute yourself. There is no separate bucket.

2025 vs. 2026 HSA Contribution Limits โ€” Side-by-Side

Coverage Type 2025 Limit 2026 Limit Increase
Self-Only $4,300 $4,400 +$100
Family $8,550 $8,750 +$200
Catch-Up (55+) $1,000 $1,000 No change
Self-Only + Catch-Up $5,300 $5,400 +$100
Family + Catch-Up $9,550 $9,750 +$200
Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19 (irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rp-25-19.pdf)
Where These Numbers Come From

Each year, the IRS adjusts HSA limits for inflation using a specific formula tied to the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U). The adjustment is rounded to the nearest $50 for family coverage and $50 for self-only coverage. Because inflation moderated in late 2024, the 2026 increases are modest: $100 for self-only and $200 for family.

The official IRS document governing all 2026 limits is Revenue Procedure 2025-19. This is the primary source for every number in this article. You can verify the figures directly at irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rp-25-19.pdf. Additionally, IRS Publication 969 (Health Savings Accounts and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans) provides the full eligibility and operational rules for HSAs and is updated each tax year.

The Triple-Tax Advantage

Before getting into the rules, it is worth anchoring why these limits matter so much. An HSA is the only account in the US tax code that offers three layers of tax protection simultaneously. To learn more about what an HSA is and how it works, see our full guide: What Is an HSA and How Does It Work?

💲
Tax Benefit #1
Contributions Are Tax-Deductible
Contributions are tax-deductible (or pre-tax via payroll), reducing your adjusted gross income in the year you contribute.

📈
Tax Benefit #2
Growth Is Tax-Free
Growth is tax-free โ€” interest, dividends, and capital gains inside the account are never taxed while funds remain in the account.

🏥
Tax Benefit #3
Withdrawals Are Tax-Free
Withdrawals are tax-free when used for qualified medical expenses โ€” no income tax, no capital gains tax, ever.

Maxing out your HSA limit each year is one of the most tax-efficient strategies available to US taxpayers with access to an HDHP.

2
Who Is Eligible to Contribute to an HSA in 2026?

To contribute to an HSA in 2026, you must meet all of the following requirements simultaneously: you must be enrolled in a qualifying high-deductible health plan (HDHP); you must not be enrolled in Medicare (any part โ€” A, B, C, or D); you must not be claimed as a dependent on someone else’s tax return; and you must not have disqualifying coverage such as a general-purpose FSA or a non-HDHP health plan.

2026 HSA Eligibility Requirements โ€” You Must Meet ALL of These

Enrolled in a qualifying HDHP
Your health plan must meet the IRS HDHP deductible and out-of-pocket maximum thresholds for 2026.

Not enrolled in Medicare
Enrollment in any part of Medicare (A, B, C, or D) disqualifies you from HSA contributions โ€” even if your employer HDHP remains active.

Not claimed as someone else’s tax dependent
If you are listed as a dependent on another person’s tax return, you cannot open or contribute to your own HSA.

No disqualifying coverage (general-purpose FSA or non-HDHP)
A standard FSA or HRA covering general medical expenses disqualifies you. A Limited-Purpose FSA (dental/vision only) is permitted. See our full HSA vs. FSA comparison guide.

HDHP Enrollment Is the Foundation

The threshold requirement is enrollment in a qualifying HDHP. Every other eligibility rule flows from this. If your health insurance does not meet the IRS definition of an HDHP for 2026 โ€” covered in detail in the next section โ€” you cannot contribute to an HSA, regardless of how healthy you are or how rarely you use healthcare.

The enrollment must be in place on the first day of the month for which you want to make contributions. If you start new HDHP coverage on April 15th, your HSA eligibility does not begin until May 1st.

Disqualifying Coverage to Watch For

Certain types of coverage will disqualify you even if you also have an HDHP:

  • Medicare enrollment: Once you enroll in any part of Medicare, you lose HSA contribution eligibility โ€” even if your employer HDHP remains in place. This is a critical trap for employees approaching 65 who delay retirement.
  • General-purpose FSA or HRA: A standard flexible spending account or health reimbursement arrangement that covers general medical expenses disqualifies you. A Limited-Purpose FSA (dental/vision only) is the exception.
  • Non-HDHP health plan: If you or your spouse has coverage under a traditional, non-HDHP health plan โ€” including as a dependent on a parent’s plan โ€” you may be disqualified depending on the plan’s structure.
  • VA health benefits: Veterans who received VA medical benefits for non-service-connected conditions within the past three months are disqualified from HSA contributions for that month.
Mid-Year Eligibility Changes

Eligibility is determined month by month. If you lose HDHP coverage mid-year โ€” say you switch to a non-HDHP plan on September 1st โ€” you can only contribute for the months you were HDHP-eligible (January through August in this example), calculated at 1/12 of the annual limit per eligible month, plus a potential last-month rule adjustment covered in Section 6.

If you gain HDHP coverage mid-year โ€” for example, starting a new job with HDHP benefits on July 1st โ€” you may elect to use the last-month rule to contribute the full annual limit, subject to meeting the testing period requirement.

Dependent Status

If you are claimed as a dependent on another person’s tax return, you cannot open or contribute to your own HSA. This is relevant for adult children under 26 who remain on a parent’s HDHP. Even if such a dependent is not claimed as a tax dependent, they should verify their status carefully before opening an HSA account.

3
What Are the 2026 HDHP Requirements?

For 2026, a health plan qualifies as an HDHP under IRS rules if it has a minimum annual deductible of $1,700 for self-only coverage or $3,400 for family coverage, and out-of-pocket maximums that do not exceed $8,500 for self-only or $17,000 for family coverage. These figures are also set by IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19.

2026 HDHP Threshold Requirements
Requirement Self-Only Family
Minimum Annual Deductible $1,700 $3,400
Maximum Out-of-Pocket $8,500 $17,000
Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19
What Counts Toward the Out-of-Pocket Maximum

The out-of-pocket maximum includes deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance โ€” but not premiums. Insurance premiums are never considered part of the out-of-pocket maximum for HDHP qualification purposes.

It is also important to note that the ACA (Affordable Care Act) sets its own out-of-pocket maximum limits, which in 2026 are $9,200 for individuals and $18,400 for families. The IRS HDHP limits ($8,500 / $17,000) are lower than the ACA caps, meaning an HDHP can have a lower OOP maximum than the ACA allows โ€” but it cannot exceed the IRS thresholds if you want to maintain HSA eligibility.

Embedded vs. Non-Embedded Deductibles for Family Plans

⚠ Important: A Common Misunderstanding
This is one of the most misunderstood HDHP rules. For a family HDHP to qualify, the plan deductible for each individual family member generally cannot be satisfied before the entire family deductible is met โ€” unless the plan has an ’embedded’ deductible that is itself at least $3,400 (the family minimum). In plain English: if your family plan has a $2,000 per-person embedded deductible, it does not qualify as an HDHP because $2,000 is below the $3,400 family minimum.

When verifying whether your employer’s plan qualifies for HSA purposes, request a copy of the Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC) and confirm both the deductible structure and that the plan is designated as an HSA-compatible HDHP. Many HR departments can provide written confirmation.

How to Verify Your Plan Qualifies

To confirm your 2026 health plan qualifies as an HDHP:

  • Review your plan’s Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC) for the deductible and out-of-pocket maximum amounts.
  • Confirm the deductible is at least $1,700 (self-only) or $3,400 (family) and the OOP max does not exceed $8,500 (self-only) or $17,000 (family).
  • Ask your HR department or plan administrator if the plan is explicitly designated as ‘HSA-eligible’ or ‘HSA-compatible.’
  • For family plans, verify the embedded deductible structure does not violate the $3,400 family minimum rule.

4
HSA Catch-Up Contributions in 2026 (Age 55+)

If you are 55 or older by December 31, 2026, and not yet enrolled in Medicare, you are eligible to make an additional catch-up contribution of $1,000 on top of the standard annual limit. The catch-up amount has been fixed at $1,000 since 2009 โ€” it is not indexed for inflation, unlike the standard limits. This brings the maximum 2026 contributions to $5,400 for self-only coverage and $9,750 for family coverage. For a complete breakdown of every catch-up rule and edge case, see our dedicated guide: HSA Catch-Up Contributions for Age 55+.

Catch-Up Eligibility: The Medicare Timing Trap

🚨 Medicare Timing Alert
Your catch-up eligibility is cut off on the first day of the month you enroll in any part of Medicare โ€” not on your 65th birthday. Many people assume they lose HSA eligibility when they turn 65, but the actual trigger is Medicare enrollment. There is also a retroactive trap for Social Security recipients: when you claim Social Security benefits, Medicare Part A enrollment is generally backdated up to six months. This can unexpectedly eliminate HSA eligibility for months in the past. If you are approaching 65, consult a benefits advisor before claiming Social Security to avoid inadvertently triggering an HSA over-contribution.

If you turn 65 in August 2026 but do not enroll in Medicare until January 2027, you can make catch-up contributions for all 12 months of 2026 (or the portion you were HDHP-enrolled). Conversely, if you enroll in Medicare Parts A and B in April 2026 at age 64, you lose HSA contribution eligibility from April 1st onward.

Spouse Catch-Up Rules โ€” Separate HSAs Required

If both you and your spouse are 55 or older and both are covered by an HDHP, you can each make catch-up contributions of $1,000. However โ€” catch-up contributions cannot be made to the same HSA. Each eligible spouse must have their own individual HSA account to receive catch-up contributions.

This means a dual-55+ couple on a family HDHP could contribute up to $10,750 total in 2026: $8,750 in the family limit (to either account) plus $1,000 in catch-up to each spouse’s individual account. However, the $8,750 family limit must be split across the two accounts; only the catch-up amounts are additive per person.

Worked Example: Dual 55+ Spouses
Scenario Spouse A (age 58) Spouse B (age 56)
Family limit (combined) $4,375 (half family limit) $4,375 (half family limit)
Catch-up contribution $1,000 (own HSA) $1,000 (own HSA)
Total per spouse $5,375 $5,375
Combined Household Total $10,750 combined
Note: The $8,750 family limit can be split any way between the two HSAs; the split above is illustrative. The $1,000 catch-up must go into each spouse’s own HSA.

5
How Employer HSA Contributions Affect Your Limit

Employer contributions to your HSA count toward the same annual IRS limit as your own contributions โ€” the $4,400 or $8,750 cap is a combined ceiling, not separate buckets. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood aspects of HSA rules, and overlooking it can cause an expensive over-contribution mistake.

Worked Example: Employer Contribution Reduces Your Available Room

Self-Only Coverage Scenario
IRS 2026 limit (self-only)
$4,400

Employer contribution (January)
โˆ’ $1,200

Your maximum personal contribution
= $3,200

If you contribute $4,400 yourself โ€” ignoring the employer’s $1,200 โ€” you will have over-contributed by $1,200. The 6% excise tax penalty on $1,200 is $72, and that penalty applies every year the excess remains in the account unless corrected.

Payroll Deduction vs. Direct Contribution

There is a tax treatment distinction worth noting. Contributions made through your employer’s payroll deduction program are excluded from both federal income tax and FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes โ€” saving you an additional 7.65% compared to making contributions directly. Direct contributions made outside of payroll are deductible on your federal income tax return (as an above-the-line deduction on Schedule 1), but they do not reduce FICA taxes. When possible, maximize payroll contributions to extract both benefits.

How to Track Total Contributions Accurately

Your HSA custodian is required to send you IRS Form 5498-SA each year, which reports all contributions made to your account. However, this form is typically issued after the tax deadline, so you need to track contributions actively during the year. Strategies include:

  • Monitor your HSA account online: Most providers show year-to-date contributions clearly on the dashboard.
  • Review your pay stubs: Employee HSA deductions appear as a separate line item on your earnings statement.
  • Track employer contributions: Your employer is required to report their contributions on your W-2 (Box 12, code W), which includes both employee payroll and employer contributions.
What Happens If Your Employer Over-Contributes

If an employer error results in contributions that push your account over the annual limit, you are still responsible for the resulting excess. Contact your HSA custodian as soon as you identify an over-contribution. You can avoid the 6% penalty by withdrawing the excess amount โ€” plus any earnings attributed to it โ€” before the tax deadline (April 15, 2027 for 2026 contributions). The withdrawn excess will be included in your gross income, but no additional penalty applies if corrected in time.

6
Pro-Rated Limits, the Last-Month Rule & Mid-Year Changes

If you were not enrolled in an HDHP for all 12 months of 2026, your HSA contribution limit is generally pro-rated based on the number of months you were eligible. However, the IRS provides an important option โ€” the last-month rule โ€” that allows you to contribute the full annual limit regardless of when you became eligible, provided you meet a testing period requirement.

Monthly Pro-Rata Calculation โ€” Worked Example

📝 Scenario: Started new job with self-only HDHP on May 1, 2026
Annual self-only limit
$4,400
Monthly amount ($4,400 รท 12)
$366.67
Eligible months (Mayโ€“December)
8 months
Pro-rated contribution limit
$2,933

The Last-Month Rule: Contribute the Full Limit

The last-month rule (also called the ‘December rule’) allows any individual who is HDHP-eligible on December 1st of 2026 to treat themselves as HSA-eligible for the entire year, regardless of when they actually became enrolled. This means you can contribute the full $4,400 (self-only) or $8,750 (family) even if you only had HDHP coverage for one month.

⚠ Testing Period Requirement
To use the last-month rule without penalty, you must remain HDHP-eligible through December 31, 2027 โ€” a full 13-month testing period (December 2026 through December 2027). If you lose HDHP eligibility during this window, the amount contributed ‘in advance’ becomes taxable income, and a 10% additional tax applies.

Testing Period Penalty Math โ€” Worked Example

Using the same 8-month example (Mayโ€“December), suppose you elected the last-month rule and contributed the full $4,400. In early 2027, you take a new job that offers only a traditional PPO health plan.

Full contribution made $4,400
Pro-rated entitlement $2,933
Excess subject to penalty $1,467
Additional 10% tax on excess $146.70
Income tax on excess (22% bracket assumed) $322.74
Total penalty cost $469.44
The last-month rule is powerful if you are confident you will remain HDHP-eligible in 2027. If your coverage situation is uncertain, the pro-rated approach is the safer option.
Mid-Year Medicare Enrollment

Enrolling in Medicare mid-year creates a specific pro-rata situation. If you turn 65 in July 2026 and enroll in Medicare Part A effective July 1st, you are HSA-eligible for only January through June โ€” 6 months. Your maximum contribution is 6/12 ร— $4,400 = $2,200 (plus $500 catch-up pro-rated for those 6 months, if applicable). Working with a benefits advisor to time Medicare enrollment carefully can preserve several additional months of HSA contribution eligibility.

7
New 2026 Rules โ€” OBBBA Changes & What They Mean for HSAs

NEW
The One Big Beautiful Budget Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, made the most significant changes to HSA rules in nearly a decade. The IRS issued guidance on the OBBBA’s HSA provisions through IRS Notice 2026-5.

Permanent Telehealth and Remote Care Flexibility

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress temporarily allowed HDHPs to cover telehealth services before the deductible was met without disqualifying account holders from HSA eligibility. This exception was extended multiple times but always as a temporary measure. The OBBBA made this telehealth flexibility permanent, effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2026.

In practical terms, this means your HDHP can now cover telehealth visits, virtual urgent care, and remote monitoring services with no deductible โ€” or a lower deductible than the standard HDHP minimum โ€” without jeopardizing your HSA eligibility. This is a meaningful expansion for people who use telehealth regularly.

Direct Primary Care Service Arrangements (DPCSAs)

The OBBBA introduced a new concept to the HSA world: the Direct Primary Care Service Arrangement, or DPCSA. A DPCSA is a direct-pay membership model between a patient and a primary care physician or practice, typically structured as a monthly fee covering unlimited primary care visits, basic lab work, and care coordination โ€” bypassing traditional insurance billing entirely.

Prior to 2026, having a DPCSA alongside an HDHP was problematic for HSA eligibility. The OBBBA resolved this by explicitly permitting HDHPs to coexist with DPCSAs for HSA eligibility purposes, subject to the following conditions:

DPCSA Safe Harbor Conditions (OBBBA 2026)
Monthly DPCSA fee cap: The monthly fee cannot exceed $150 for individual coverage or $300 for family coverage. Fees above these thresholds revert to disqualifying coverage.

Primary care scope only: The DPCSA must be limited to primary care and basic ancillary services. Arrangements including specialty care, imaging, or complex diagnostics fall outside the OBBBA safe harbor.

Must be a recognized arrangement: The DPCSA must meet the definition under applicable state law or federal guidance, as clarified in IRS Notice 2026-5.

Which Bronze and Catastrophic ACA Plans Now Qualify

The OBBBA also clarified that certain bronze-tier and catastrophic ACA marketplace plans that meet the HDHP deductible and out-of-pocket thresholds now qualify as HDHPs for HSA purposes, even if they cover some preventive services at reduced cost-sharing. This aligns IRS HDHP rules more cleanly with ACA plan tiers and removes a compliance ambiguity. If you purchase a bronze or catastrophic ACA plan for 2026, verify that your specific plan is designated as HSA-eligible โ€” not all bronze and catastrophic plans automatically qualify. The deductible and OOP maximum must still meet the IRS thresholds for 2026.

8
HSA Contribution Strategies to Maximize Your 2026 Tax Savings

Knowing the limits is the starting point. Knowing how to deploy them is where meaningful savings are built. Here are the most effective strategies for 2026. For a deeper dive into every optimization angle, see our full guide: How to Maximize Your HSA Contributions. For more on retirement savings vehicles, also see our guides on Roth IRA withdrawal rules and Rollover IRA vs. Traditional IRA.

Strategy 1
Treat Your HSA as a Retirement Account

Many people use their HSA as a pass-through โ€” contribute, spend on medical bills, done. A more powerful approach is to pay current medical expenses out of pocket (if you can afford to), let your HSA balance grow invested, and accumulate receipts for years or even decades. There is no statute of limitations on HSA reimbursements: you can reimburse yourself in 2036 for a medical expense you paid in 2026, as long as you have the receipt and the expense was qualified. This turns your HSA into a tax-free slush fund for retirement healthcare costs, which Fidelity estimates at over $165,000 for an average couple retiring in 2025. To learn more about investing your savings, see our guide on what is a brokerage account.

Strategy 2
Frontload If You Expect High Medical Expenses

If you anticipate significant medical expenses in early 2026 โ€” a scheduled surgery, pregnancy, or planned procedure โ€” consider contributing the full annual limit as early in the year as possible. Since HSA funds are available for eligible expenses as soon as they are in the account (unlike FSAs, which can be pre-funded by employers), frontloading ensures you have maximum tax-advantaged dollars available when you need them.

Strategy 3
Invest Your Balance Above the Minimum Threshold

Most HSA providers allow you to invest your balance in mutual funds or ETFs once it exceeds a threshold, typically $1,000โ€“$2,000. If you are using your HSA as a long-term savings vehicle, keep only a cash buffer at the threshold and invest everything above it. Over 20โ€“30 years, this can produce a substantially larger tax-free balance than leaving funds in a low-yield savings account. You can also compare other types of savings accounts to understand how an HSA stacks up.

Strategy 4
Coordinate Employer Contributions With Your Payroll Elections

Review when your employer deposits HSA contributions. Some employers front-load their contribution in January; others spread it monthly or make a lump sum at year-end. Adjust your payroll elections to avoid accidental over-contribution. For example, if your employer contributes $1,200 in January (self-only coverage), your monthly payroll deduction should be no more than ($4,400 โˆ’ $1,200) รท 12 = $266.67. Many HR systems will not automatically calculate this; you need to set the right amount manually. For more advanced tactics, read our complete guide: How to Maximize Your HSA Contributions.

9
What Happens If You Over-Contribute to Your HSA?

If you contribute more than the IRS-permitted limit to your HSA in 2026, the excess is subject to a 6% excise tax for every year the excess remains in the account. This penalty is reported on IRS Form 5329 and added to your tax liability. For the full breakdown of correction options and IRS rules, see our dedicated guide: What Happens If You Over-Contribute to Your HSA?

To avoid or correct an over-contribution:
1
Withdraw before the deadline
If you identify the over-contribution before April 15, 2027, withdraw the excess plus any earnings it generated. The excess is included in gross income but no excise tax applies if corrected in time.

2
Apply to the following year
You can elect to treat the excess as a contribution for 2027 instead of withdrawing it, provided your 2027 contribution room accommodates it. Report this on Form 5329.

!
Do not let it compound
Each year the excess remains uncorrected, the 6% penalty resets. A $500 over-contribution left in the account for three years incurs $30 in penalties per year โ€” preventable with a timely correction.

10
Frequently Asked Questions About 2026 HSA Rules

Can I contribute to an HSA and an FSA at the same time?
Generally, no. If you are enrolled in a standard FSA (Flexible Spending Account) through your employer, you are disqualified from contributing to an HSA. The only exception is a Limited-Purpose FSA (LP-FSA), which covers only dental and vision expenses and is compatible with HSA eligibility. Read our full HSA vs. FSA guide for a detailed comparison.

What happens to my HSA funds if I never use them?
Unlike FSAs, HSA funds roll over indefinitely. There is no ‘use it or lose it’ rule. Unused balances carry over from year to year, and many providers allow you to invest your balance in mutual funds or ETFs once it exceeds a threshold, typically $1,000. You can use the funds for qualified medical expenses at any time in the future, including in retirement.

Can I use my HSA to pay for a spouse’s or dependent’s medical expenses?
Yes. You can use your HSA funds to pay for qualified medical expenses for yourself, your spouse, and any tax dependents, even if they are not covered by your HDHP.

What is the deadline to make an HSA contribution for 2026?
You have until April 15, 2027 โ€” the federal tax filing deadline for tax year 2026 โ€” to make contributions that count toward the 2026 limit. This mirrors the IRA contribution deadline. See our complete guide on HSA contribution deadlines and tax filing dates for key dates, extensions, and state-specific rules.

Are HSA withdrawals for non-medical expenses penalized?
Before age 65, withdrawals for non-qualified expenses are subject to income tax plus a 20% penalty. After age 65, non-qualified withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income but the 20% penalty no longer applies, making HSAs function similarly to a traditional IRA for non-medical spending. For more on penalties and how to avoid them, see our guide on what happens if you over-contribute to your HSA.

Can I contribute to an HSA if I am on a parent’s health plan?
No. If you are listed as a dependent on someone else’s tax return, you are not eligible to contribute to your own HSA, even if you are enrolled in an HDHP.

Does my HSA balance transfer if I change jobs?
Yes. HSAs are portable and belong to you, not your employer. Your account and balance remain yours regardless of job changes, insurance changes, or retirement.

What is IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19?
IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19 is the official IRS guidance that establishes the 2026 HSA contribution limits, HDHP minimum deductible thresholds, and out-of-pocket maximum caps. It was issued in May 2025 and is the authoritative source for all 2026 HSA figures cited in this article.

What is IRS Publication 969?
IRS Publication 969, Health Savings Accounts and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans, is the comprehensive IRS guide covering HSA eligibility, contribution rules, distributions, and record-keeping. It is updated annually and is available free at irs.gov.

Can a self-employed person open and contribute to an HSA?
Yes. Self-employed individuals enrolled in a qualifying HDHP are fully eligible to contribute to an HSA and deduct contributions as an above-the-line deduction on their federal tax return. They are subject to the same limits as employees.

📖 Sources & References
IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19 โ€” Official source for 2026 HSA contribution limits and HDHP thresholds. irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rp-25-19.pdf

IRS Publication 969 (2025 edition) โ€” Health Savings Accounts and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans. irs.gov/publications/p969

IRS Notice 2026-5 โ€” IRS guidance on OBBBA HSA provisions including DPCSA rules and permanent telehealth flexibility. irs.gov

Fidelity Investments โ€” HSA Contribution Limits Resource Center โ€” fidelity.com/learning-center/smart-money/hsa-contribution-limits

CNBC โ€” ‘Here are the HSA contribution limits for 2026’ (May 2025)

IRS Form 5329 โ€” Additional Taxes on Qualified Plans (used to report HSA excise taxes for over-contributions)

IRS Form 8889 โ€” Health Savings Accounts (required attachment to your tax return when you have an HSA)

Affiliate Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links to HSA providers. FinanceNavigatorPro may receive compensation if you open an account through these links, at no additional cost to you. Our editorial content is independent of any affiliate relationships. This is not personalized tax or financial advice; consult a qualified advisor for guidance specific to your situation.

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