Reimbursement Comparison |
FSA and DCA |
HRA |
HSA* |
|---|---|---|---|
Overview |
FSA: Cafeteria plan account authorized under IRC Section 125 that reimburses for qualified medical expenses defined under Section 213(d). |
Employer maintained account that reimburses employees for qualified medical care expenses. |
A tax-exempt trust or custodial account created to pay for qualified medical expenses of the employee and their dependent(s). |
Who is eligible |
Employee whose employer offers an FSA plan. |
Employee whose employer offers an HRA plan. |
Individuals and families who are covered under a high-deductible health plan and no other health plan (with the exception of some permitted insurance such as workers’ comp, property insurance, insurance for hospitalization, accidents, disability, dental, vision or long-term care). |
Health plan requirements |
None. |
Generally, an employee must be enrolled in a health plan sponsored by the employer to be eligible for an HRA. Small employers may offer an HRA in place of health insurance.* *Subject to restrictions. |
Qualified high-deductible health plan. Minimum deductibles and maximum out-of-pocket set by the federal government annually. |
Who may contribute |
The employee, employer or both. Typically funded by employees. |
Employer only (subject to non-discrimination requirements). |
Either the employee or the employer (subject to comparability requirements) or both. Individuals who are claimed as a dependent on another person’s tax return or who are Medicare eligible cannot contribute. |
Contribution limits |
FSA: Employer typically sets limits, however contributions are capped by the IRS at $3,300 per employee beginning January 1, 2025. *Please note amounts can be different if changed as a result of an “Act” and may have to be elected by your employer. |
No federal income tax law limits. Employer defines the amount that will be contributed. |
Up to 100% of the annual maximum amount determined by the federal government. In 2024, the individual contribution limit is $4,300 and the family contribution limit is $8,550. |
Qualified expenses |
Unreimbursed medical expenses as defined in section 213(d) of IRC, except for health insurance premiums (i.e. copays, dental, vision, over-the-counter products, day care, etc.). Qualified Dependent Care Allowance expenses, such as after- school programs, daycare, pre-school or nursery school programs. |
Unreimbursed medical expenses as defined in Section 213 (d) of IRC, and may include retiree health insurance premiums, depending on restrictions outlined in the employer plan design. |
Unreimbursed medical expenses as defined in Section 213(d) of IRC, except for allowable health insurance premiums (allowable premiums: COBRA, long-term care and insurance while receiving unemployment compensation). |
Rollover from other accounts |
No other reimbursement accounts are eligible to be rolled over into this benefit. |
Generally no, except from one HRA to another at the same employer. |
Yes. From another HSA or MSA (does not count toward annual contribution limit). |
Fund carryover |
Up to $640 may be carried over from year to year if elected by the employer (the FSA cannot have a grace period and include a carryover). |
Yes. Unused balances can be carried over, but subject to employer set limits. |
Yes. Funds can be carried over for the account holder’s lifetime. |
Portability |
No. Unused balances are forfeited to the employer if the employee leaves or changes jobs. |
Generally no, but an employer may allow balances to be spent down at termination or at retirement. |
Yes. Employees may take funds with them when they leave or change jobs. |
Interest accrual |
No. Interest is not accrued. |
There is no requirement that interest accrues, but employers have discretion to credit interest to the HRA account. |
Yes. Interest accrues tax-free. May invest in mutual funds, CDs and interest bearing savings accounts, but not in life insurance contracts. |