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June 3, 2019
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When I entered my hsa contributions it made my tax owed go up. Since HSA contributions are pre-tax, that seems wrong. Why do I have to pay tax on the HSA contributions?

  • June 3, 2019
  • 2 replies
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When I entered my HSA contributions ($7,613.88) it made my tax owed go up by $2,589. Since HSA contributions are pre-tax, that seems wrong. Why do I have to pay tax on the HSA contributions? 


None of the answers to your questions address this. 

Best answer by TomYoung

"Why do I have to pay tax on the HSA contributions? "

You don't have to pay tax on your HSA contribution, and you won't pay taxes on your HSA contribution when you tell TurboTax that you're covered by a qualifying HDHP.

 

When you enter that information off your W-2 TurboTax doesn't know if you're covered or not.  Pending an answer to that question it kicks the deduction over to "Other income" (line 21 of the Form 1040) and your tax goes up.  Once you work through the HDHP/HSA questions over in the "Credits and Deductions" area TurboTax will reverse that entry and your taxes will go back down.

 

Tom Young

 

2 replies

June 3, 2019
The same thing happened to me.  I don't understand the details of why, but for some reason the form input filled out the underlying tax form wrong.  If you go to the form (8889-T) itself using the 'Forms' button, you will probably see in sections 1 and 3 that the boxes to indicate coverage under a HDHP (high deductible health plan) were not checked, thereby making your HSA contributions non-deductible.  I compared to my forms from last year. and made it look the same, because nothing has changed in my case.  That fixed it, and showed my whole contribution as deductible on line 13 (HSA deduction).   Hope this helps!
TomYoungAnswer
June 3, 2019

"Why do I have to pay tax on the HSA contributions? "

You don't have to pay tax on your HSA contribution, and you won't pay taxes on your HSA contribution when you tell TurboTax that you're covered by a qualifying HDHP.

 

When you enter that information off your W-2 TurboTax doesn't know if you're covered or not.  Pending an answer to that question it kicks the deduction over to "Other income" (line 21 of the Form 1040) and your tax goes up.  Once you work through the HDHP/HSA questions over in the "Credits and Deductions" area TurboTax will reverse that entry and your taxes will go back down.

 

Tom Young

 

June 3, 2019
That's very helpful. Thanks Tom!