Rocklin & Roseville Sacramento Folsom Auburn Lincoln
Roseville & Rocklin News Auburn News Sacramento County News RSS Feed Placer County News
Plumbing, Heating & Air Gateway...To Better Health Insurance Natural Medicine Local Real Estate Disabilities Alternative Medicine
Plans & Pricing 2010 Media Kit (PDF) Payments (current customers) Contact Sales
Auburn Los Angeles Lake Tahoe Monterey Rocklin Roseville Sacramento San Diego San Francisco San Jose SHOW ALL CALIFORNIA CITIES
View All Events Add an Event
Gutter Cleaning Fence Repair Tree Trimming and Removal Bankruptcy Attorneys Bookkeeping Personal Trainers Quickbooks Training Skin Care
Business Consultants Custom Embroidery Local Online Marketing Photography Printing Signs & Banners Web Designers

 Roseville Newspaper and Yellow Pages Online masthead logo


     
  

Jobs  News  Movie Times  Log In  Contact  RSS  Advertise   
 

How Health Savings Accounts Work

Posted on: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 -  
 RSS Feed  Print version     Local Events Need a Job?

(ARA) - A month ago, Jenny Thomas checked into her local hospital to deliver her first child. 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,” says Kurt Stammberger, vice president of marketing for Vimo, a company that provides comparison shopping information on health insurance plans, products and doctors. “Usually, money that save in the plan comes out of your paycheck before payroll taxes are computed, so 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 $2,000 to $3,000. 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,” Stammberger says. Once you’re enrolled, you can use the money in the account for almost any approved medical, dental, vision or disability health care or expense.

HSAs differ from one another mostly in the ways they grow. Some HSAs grow like traditional savings accounts, with interest compounding daily. Other HSAs 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 set up automatic deductions from your paycheck, usually totaling an annual amount less than your HDHP deductible. You then invest your accumulating HSA funds in interest-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, you 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.

To learn more about health savings accounts, visit www.vimo.com.

Copyright © 2006, ARA Content



Make the Switch from Legacy Media and Save $$$
Roseville & Rocklin's #1 Local Online Yellow Pages

Helping Local Businesses Grow since 2003.
Effective, simple, & affordable
.
Plans & Pricing       Download our 2010 Media Kit (pdf) 3 MB













H1N1 Clinics in Placer County
No appointment is needed for any of these Placer County Health Department H1N1 clinics, and the immunizations are free
Cesar E. Chavez Youth Leadership Conference and Fair
The Hispanic Empowerment Association of Roseville (HEAR), the Latino Leadership Council and the Cooley Latino Student Club will host the 10th Annual Cesar E. Chavez Youth Leadership Conference and Education Fair for 6th to 12 graders and their parents
Rocklin & Roseville Weekly Jobs Roundup
A brief snapshot of a few recent local job openings for the week ending Feb 13, 2010. Seeking employment? Check out thousands of local job openings in the Roseville, Rocklin and greater Sacramento region.
Murder Charges Dismissed against Caleb Madsen
After three mistrials in a murder case against a Granite Bay man who was accused of fatally stabbing his friend in 2005, the Placer County District Attorney’s Office today moved to have the charges dismissed
Lincoln Wastewater Plant to receive CWEA Award
The City of Lincoln will be awarded the Sacramento Section Small Wastewater Treatment Plant of the Year Award, by the California Water Environment Association (CWEA). The award was made in the facility’s first year of eligibility
Sierra College WAA Hall of Fame Class of 2010
The Sierra College Wolverine Athletic Association (WAA) recently announced the 2010 inductees into the Sierra College Athletic Association Hall of Fame. The formal induction ceremony and luncheon is slated for Saturday, Feb. 20
6th DUI earns six years in state prison
An Oregon man has been sentenced to six years in a California prison following a Placer County jury conviction for driving under the influence of alcohol – his sixth DUI-related offense over a 21-year period.
91 Year-Old Roseville Man gets 6 Months Jail
Claude Montgomery, the 91-year-old Roseville man who was arrested for allegedly trying to kill his 78-year-old wife, was sentenced today to six months in the Placer County Jail.

Rocklin & Roseville Today News Headlines

Auburn Today News Headlines

Sacramento Today News Headlines


Upcoming Events

2/9/2010
2/9/2010
2/11/2010
2/11/2010
2/11/2010
2/11/2010

arrow add event  arrow view all

Free Classifieds

arrow View / Post

Sections & Features













About   |  Contact  |  Privacy Policy  |  Copyright © 2003-2010 Rocklin & Roseville Today   |  Advertise |   Payments | RSS      |  

Our Network:   Rocklin & Roseville   |   Sacramento   |   Folsom   |   Lincoln   |   Auburn