House Democrats Propose Misguided HSA Reforms
House Democrats are moving to curb the benefits of Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), arguing that the popular tax-advantaged accounts increasingly double as investment vehicles for the wealthy rather than a way for families to pay medical bills.
Rep. Lloyd Doggett, a longtime Texas Democrat and the ranking member on the House Ways and Means Health Subcommittee, has introduced the Health Savings Accounts (HSA) Consumer Protection Act.
The bill arrives just as millions of Americans are facing some of the largest health care insurance premium increases ever. While HSAs are a great tool to invest and build wealth – their key benefit is to help families afford the high cost of healthcare in America.
Democrats point to a new Government Accountability Office report (PDF File) and other analyses showing HSAs skew heavily toward higher-income, healthier, and disproportionately White and Asian account holders. They also highlight projections that HSAs will reduce federal tax revenues by roughly $180 billion over the next decade.
But it’s important to note that wealthier families opt towards HSAs because they have to – not by choice. These plans are typically the cheapest option in the face of ACA penalties. And this potential fix would punish everyone due to changes in qualifying expenses and reimbursement options.
In short, this proposal is bad for everyone except the government. All it would do is increase taxes for Americans, while providing no benefit to those who are trying to pay for the excessive healthcare costs created by the current healthcare system. It’s even bad for health insurance companies and HSA providers, who’ll be subject to more record-keeping and potential taxes. It’s actually pretty wild to see such a terrible bill proposed.
Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) were created in 2003 to pair with high-deductible health plans (HDHPs). The idea was simple: lower premiums, higher deductibles, and a tax-deferred account to help people cover the bigger out-of-pocket exposure.
They come with three tax benefits:
That combination is rare in the tax code and powerful for people who can afford to contribute. At the end of 2023, HSAs held about $123 billion in assets, according to the GAO.
But the benefits are not evenly distributed. Doggett’s office cites numbers showing that only a small share of contribution dollars come from households under $50,000 in income, while the bulk come from those over $100,000.
Meanwhile, many lower-income families simply never get to the point of using the account as designed. A majority of HSAs hold less than $1,000, and more than one in five have no balance at all, according to the GAO.
The HSA Consumer Protection Act (PDF File) does far more than ban hidden fees or clarify eligible expenses. In tax-code language, it rewrites big pieces of section 223.
Key provisions include:
On paper, those changes speak the language of waste, fraud, and consumer protection. In practice, they would fundamentally change how millions of people use HSAs.
Supporters of Rep. Lloyd Doggett’s bill say HSAs function as “tax shelters for the wealthy,” pointing to Treasury and GAO data (PDF File) showing that households above $100,000 capture roughly three-quarters of all HSA contribution dollars.
Democrats say the government is losing $180 billion in tax revenue over 10 years because of HSAs (which, given there is only $123 billion in assets in HSAs as of 2023, it’s really hard to fathom where $180 billion in tax revenue would come from).
The simple truth is this bill doesn’t seem to acknowledge the current economics of health care in America – particularly who can even afford HSA-eligible plans because of the Affordable Care Act.
HSAs are available only to people enrolled in federally defined high-deductible health plans (HDHPs). In practice, those plans come with high premiums. In many states, including California, the cheapest HSA-eligible plan can exceed $1,300 – $1,800 per month for a family (a cost unreachable for households earning less than $50,000 or even $100,000 a year).
Once a family achieves roughly $150,000 in income, there are no subsidies available to lower the costs. Even families making $100,000 would still pay about $700 per month in out-of pocket premiums with the subsidies (or roughly 8% of their annual income).
Here is a screenshot of California’s health insurance marketplace for 2026. Only 10 plans out of 38 are HSA-eligible, and the cheapest HSA-eligible health insurance plan for a family of four costs $1,342.94 per month – or $16,115 per year. And remember, because these are high deductible plans – families will pay for every doctor visit and prescription until that $7,200 deductible is met.
Lowest priced California HSA-Eligible health plans for a family of four.
Lower-income families are not opting out because HSAs are unattractive – they are priced out before the tax benefits are relevant. Even if they enroll in an HSA-eligible healthcare plan, they don’t typically have extra savings they can use to make contributions to it. Surveys consistently show that nearly 60% of Americans cannot cover a $1,000 emergency. They’re not going to put money in an HSA if they cannot afford the basics.
Federal HDHP rules require sizable deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums:
2025 requirements:
• Deductibles: $1,650 (self-only) / $3,300 (family)
• OOP maximums: $8,300 (self-only) / $16,600 (family)
2026 requirements:
• Deductibles: $1,700 (self-only) / $3,400 (family)
• OOP maximums: $8,500 (self-only) / $17,000 (family)
These limits apply only to in-network care. Out-of-network spending can be substantially higher. And HSA contribution limits have not kept pace. In 2025, a family can contribute $8,550, and in 2026, up to $8,750.
It would take families at least two years to save to be able to afford something catastrophic (or even planned, like child birth). If there’s a two year reimbursement window, families may not have enough money to cover the mandated out-of-pocket expenses.
Doggett’s bill phases out the HSA deduction starting at modified AGI of $150,000 for single filers and $300,000 for joint filers.
It’s important to note that households at those income levels already receive no ACA premium assistance, pay some of the highest premiums in the entire market, and often struggle to save anything beyond basic expenses. It’s why making $100,000 in America still leaves you broke.
Plus, HSA contribution limits are a prime example of a marriage penalty – which is just wrong. You can see that it’s mathematically better to be two single people contributing to HSAs than a family.
For many, the HSA deduction is the only remaining tax tool that individuals and families have to help with rising health costs (that’s not giving money straight to health insurance companies).
The bill has one semi-positive proposal: preventing
excessive HSA fees and opaque account disclosures.
The legislation would require custodians to report detailed information on maintenance charges, transfer fees, paper statement fees, and other common add-ons — costs that often erode the small balances held by lower- and middle-income users.
It’s important to note that our list highlights these fees, and the best HSA accounts don’t have them anyway,
It would also impose an excise tax on fees deemed “unreasonable,” giving the Treasury authority to penalize custodians who charge far above market norms. But the bill stops short of defining a clear “excessive fee cap”, leaving “reasonable” fees to be determined later through regulation.
Again though – while this bill does make a pseudo-attempt to solve an actual problem, it doesn’t even do that. It could have been just as easy to write a bill that says “HSA plans cannot charge monthly maintenance fees nor require customers to maintain minimum balances”.
It should make you frustrated reading this that our legislators cannot do simple things…
If the bill advances in anything like its current form, the impact on households could be significant:
For now, the proposal is not likely to go anywhere, but it should be a big red flag about what Democrats are thinking. Instead of fixing healthcare premiums, they want to punish consumers who save and invest to plan for the future.
Consumers who rely on HSAs for tax savings or future medical costs may want to watch this debate closely. And, in the meantime, make sure they understand their current plan’s fees and record-keeping rules in case Congress decides to change them.
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