This key retirement tool is getting a big boost next year

How much you can contribute to your health savings account — considered a go-to retirement tool by many financial planners — is getting the biggest increase ever next year.

The new 2024 annual limit announced by the IRS on health savings account, or HSA, contributions for individuals will be $4,150, a $300 or 7.8% uptick from the $3,850 limit in 2023. For family coverage, the HSA contribution limit rises to $8,300, up $550 or 7.1% from $7,750 this year.

That’s the largest climb in the contribution level since the accounts were established in 2004. The big bump is on top of this year's sizable 5.5% increase over 2022 contribution limits, and is sharply up from the tiny 1.4% increase between 2021 and 2022. The extra catch-up contribution for account holders 55 and older remains fixed at $1,000.

“HSA contribution limit increases for 2024 are the highest we’ve seen and are a natural consequence of inflation running hotter than in the past,” Jake Spiegel, research associate, health and wealth benefits, at the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization, told Yahoo Finance. “The increase will certainly help account holders stretch their health care savings a little further.”

The larger contribution maximum can also help boost retirement savings with the vehicle’s triple tax advantage.

(Getty Creative)
(Getty Creative) · John Fedele via Getty Images

What is an HSA?

In order to put money into an HSA, you must be enrolled in a high-deductible health plan. With a high-deductible plan, you pay a lower premium per month than other types of plans, but a higher annual deductible — the amount you pay for covered medical costs before insurance kicks in.

You can also open an account as a self-employed freelancer or business owner if you have a qualified high-deductible health plan (HDHP).

Your HSA contribution with your employer can be made through an automatic payroll deduction where the funds are directed from your paycheck, tax-free, into the account. You can also add funds directly to your HSA at any time. While these contributions aren't tax-free, they are deductible on your tax return.

Some employers match contributions to HSAs similar to employer-provided retirement savings accounts. Your contributions roll over year after year and are yours to take along when you retire or change employers.

There’s a hefty 20% penalty on any withdrawal amount that is not used toward a qualified medical expense like your deductible, and you’ll pay income tax on the disqualified sum.

For anyone 65 or older, the penalty is gone, meaning you can withdraw funds for any purpose and only pay income tax on it, which leads to what makes these accounts so appealing.