Solved
I have a high deductible health plan, and I'm trying to determine if opening an HSA would help reduce my taxable income.
At tax time, what is deductible?: The total amount I contributed to the HSA during the tax year, or whatever is remaining in the HSA account after subtracting qualified health expenses?
Since I'm self-employed, relatively healthy, and don't have much to contribute to an HSA, I'd only be contributing $500/yr at the most, and would expect to use up whatever I've contributed - Meaning, there wouldn't be any balance in my HSA to roll over into the next tax year.
If I use my HSA in this way, is there any real tax benefit?
Contributions to your HSA reduce your taxable income as the contributions show up as deductions on line 25 - "Health savings account deduction" - of your Form 1040 in calculating your taxable income. Any amount you take out of your HSA and use for qualified medical expenses are also tax free to you. So the tax benefit is associated with the gross contribution, not the "net" after distributions.
Tom Young
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