TIME TO GET FLEXIBLE WITH FLEXIBLE SPENDING ACCOUNTS
Flexible spending accounts are becoming
more attractive for workers to offset rising healthcare and childcare
costs, if only more eligible workers would take advantage of the
accounts.
A flexible spending account, or
reimbursement account, is an account offered through your employer
that allows you to set aside wages tax-free to pay for such out-of-pocket
expenses as medical or dependent care of a child or adult. At
the start of the enrollment period, you declare how much you want
to set aside for the next 12 months to pay for anticipated expenses.
Say it's $1,200 for medical care (there are separate accounts
for medical and dependent care). The employer takes out a portion
of that amount each paycheck, such as $100 a month (some employers
might require a larger initial payment). As you incur qualified
out-of-pocket expenses, you turn in the receipts to your employer,
who reimburses you up to the $1,200, even if the expenses total
$1,200 in the first month.
Unlike tax-deferred money eventually
withdrawn from an employer's retirement plan, FSA reimbursements
are never taxed as long as they are used for qualified expenses.
This means the government (federal and most states with income
taxes) effectively underwrites a portion of the expenses. If you're
in a combined federal/state income-tax bracket of 30 percent,
then you'll save about $400 in taxes on the $1,200 you set aside.
Federal law doesn't limit how much
you can set aside in a healthcare FSA as long as it doesn't exceed
your income. But most employers cap healthcare FSAs at $2,500
to $5,000. Federal law limits dependent care FSAs to $5,000.
Despite these clear tax benefits,
only 18 percent of eligible workers signed up for healthcare FSAs
and just 7 percent for dependent care accounts, according to 2002
statistics from Mercer Human Resources Consulting[FSA computer file]. Why such a low participation rate?
First, many workers don't realize
the tax advantages. But the bigger barrier to FSAs has been worker
fears that they'll set aside too much. Under FSA rules, you forfeit
to the employer any money set aside that you don't spend by the
end of the 12-month period. For example, if you set aside $1,200
but incur only $1,100 in qualified expenses, you forfeit $100.
You can't roll it into the following year or take back the leftover
money.
Careful projection of upcoming expenses
can alleviate much of this risk. Also, a recent IRS ruling has
broadened what's covered under a healthcare FSA, making it easier
to avoid the “use it or lose it” problem. Under the
old rules, out-of-pocket qualified medical expenses included deductibles
and co-pays, prescription drugs, eyeglasses, orthodontia and birth
control pills. The new rules allow over-the-counter medications
such as pain relievers and cold medication, as well as antacids,
pregnancy test kits, band-aids, nicotine patches and even cotton
balls (some plans may not allow some or any of these items). Beyond
the fact that these nonprescription medications are covered, their
inclusion reduces the risk of forfeiting FSA funds. One could
always load up on nonprescription drugs toward the end of the
year in order to use up leftover FSA funds.
Employers also are making FSAs more
valuable, though in a more perverse way. As employers shift more
of the cost of healthcare co-pays and deductibles to their employees
(you can't pay for premiums through an FSA), flexible spending
accounts can help offset some of the increase.
Unfortunately for many workers,
FSAs are offered mainly through larger employers. And not all
workers should take advantage of available FSAs. Financial planners
note that low-income families may come out ahead financially claiming
the childcare tax credit instead of using a dependent care FSA
(you can't claim both), though the healthcare FSA remains a good
deal regardless of income.
Workers nearing retirement for an
employer providing a traditional defined benefit plan also need
to keep in mind that their retirement payouts are usually based
on their average salary for the last three to four years of work.
Pre-tax money set aside for FSA accounts reduces that base salary,
and thus will reduce retirement benefits. You also don't pay Social
Security and Medicare taxes on the set-aside amount, potentially
reducing your eventual Social Security benefits.
But for most workers eligible for
such plans, FSAs are a real deal.
This article was produced by the Consumer Affairs Dept. of The
Financial Planning Association and provided to you courtesy of Terry
P. Welsh, CFP, Ketchikan, Alaska. If you have any questions or concerns
regarding this, or any other financial topic, please call me at
1-907-225-0619, or click on the "CONTACT US" button to arrange for
a free initial consultation.