FSA vs HSA 2026: Which One Actually Saves You More Money?
HSA limit is $4,300 in 2026, FSA caps at $3,300. The HSA rolls over, invests tax-free, and saves $297 more per year. Here's when the FSA makes more sense.
Disclaimer: Tax figures reflect estimated 2026 projections based on IRS Publication 15-T. Tax law changes frequently. Verify with a CPA or the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator. Calcwyse.com is not a tax advisor.
The HSA limit is $4,300 for single coverage in 2026. The FSA cap is $3,300. But the dollar gap isn’t why most people pick the wrong one.
Workers with access to both accounts default to an FSA because their employer set it up at open enrollment. That choice costs some of them thousands in lost investment growth. The math here shows exactly who should use what.
FSA vs HSA: The Core Difference
These accounts share one thing: contributions go in pre-tax and qualified medical withdrawals come out tax-free. Everything else is different.
An FSA is a use-it-or-lose-it account tied to your employer. The 2026 limit is $3,300 (IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-19). Your employer may allow a $660 rollover or a 2.5-month grace period — but not both. Many offer neither. Leave your job, lose the balance.
An HSA is yours. It rolls over every year, every dollar. You can invest it. Take it to your next job. After 65, spend it on anything without penalty — it functions like a second IRA. The 2026 individual limit is $4,300; family coverage hits $8,550.
One catch. You need a High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) to open an HSA.
📊 FSA vs HSA — 2026 Side-by-Side
Feature FSA HSA 2026 contribution limit (individual) $3,300 $4,300 2026 contribution limit (family) $3,300 $8,550 Rollover Up to $660 or grace period 100% — forever Investment option No Yes Portable (job change) No Yes Requires HDHP No Yes Tax on contributions Pre-tax / payroll deduction Pre-tax or deductible Tax on growth N/A Tax-free Tax on qualified withdrawals Tax-free Tax-free After 65, non-medical withdrawals Taxable + 20% penalty Taxable, no penalty Sources: IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-19 · IRS Publication 969
The Tax Savings, Calculated
Both accounts use pre-tax dollars. The math runs the same on that front.
In the 22% federal bracket, maxing an FSA saves you roughly $726 in federal income tax. Maxing an HSA saves $946. Add FICA savings from payroll deductions (7.65%) and the gap widens.
📊 2026 Tax Savings — 22% Federal Bracket, Single Filer
FSA HSA Max contribution $3,300 $4,300 Federal income tax saved (22%) $726 $946 FICA saved (7.65%, payroll deduction) $252 $329 Total estimated tax savings $978 $1,275 Difference — +$297/year Estimated · 2026 IRS brackets · standard deduction · payroll deduction assumed for FICA savings · IRS Publication 15-T
Quick math: FSA → $978/year in tax savings. HSA → $1,275/year. The gap is $297 before investment returns. Estimated · 2026 IRS brackets · single filer · standard deduction.
That’s nearly $300 more per year from the HSA — before any investment growth.
Over 10 years, maxing an HSA and investing at 6% average return puts roughly $56,000 in that account. The FSA balance after year one? $660 max rollover.
Who Should Use an FSA
The FSA isn’t worthless. It’s the right call in specific situations.
You can’t open an HSA without an HDHP. If your employer offers only a traditional PPO, the FSA is your only pre-tax option for medical expenses. Full stop.
FSAs also work when you have predictable, high costs coming — a planned surgery, braces, a baby. The FSA fronts the full $3,300 on January 1, even if you’ve only contributed one month’s worth. Spend $3,300 in February and the employer absorbs the shortfall if you leave early. That’s a real, useful feature.
And if your employer contributes to your FSA — some do — that’s free money. Don’t walk away from it.
Who Should Use an HSA
On an HDHP and generally healthy? The HSA wins.
The minimum deductibles for HDHP qualification in 2026 are $1,650 (individual) and $3,300 (family), per IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-19. Meet those thresholds and you’re eligible.
The real HSA play isn’t paying current medical bills. It’s investing the balance and letting it grow tax-free, then using it for Medicare premiums or long-term care in retirement. At 35, maxing an HSA every year, you could have $200,000+ in the account by 65. Every dollar comes out tax-free for qualified medical expenses at any age.
Most HSA holders don’t realize: you can pay medical bills out of pocket now, save every receipt, and reimburse yourself years later — tax-free. No deadline on reimbursement. Some people run the HSA as a pure investment account and cover all current costs with regular income.
Can You Have Both?
Mostly no. An HSA-eligible HDHP disqualifies you from contributing to a general-purpose FSA simultaneously.
The exception: a Limited-Purpose FSA. It covers only dental and vision. You can pair one with an HSA legally — which adds up to $3,300 more in pre-tax dental and vision spending on top of your $4,300 HSA. That’s $7,600 total in pre-tax health accounts. Legitimate strategy if your dental costs are consistent.
Some employers also offer a Dependent Care FSA (DCFSA). That covers childcare. It doesn’t affect HSA eligibility — completely separate.
How the HSA Tax Advantage Varies by State
Federal tax savings are the same for everyone. State tax savings depend on where you live.
Most people don’t realize: a handful of states don’t recognize HSA deductions at all. Contribute $4,300 to your HSA in California and you owe California income tax on it anyway — the state treats HSAs as taxable. New Jersey does the same.
Estimated annual HSA tax savings on a $4,300 contribution by state — 2026:
- 🟢 Texas — $1,275 (no state income tax; full federal + FICA savings)
- 🟢 Florida — $1,275 (no state income tax; full federal + FICA savings)
- 🟢 Washington — $1,275 (no state income tax; full federal + FICA savings)
- 🟡 Colorado — $1,447 (4.4% flat state rate adds $189 in additional state savings)
- 🟡 Illinois — $1,496 (4.95% flat; HSA deductible at state level)
- 🟡 Georgia — $1,480 (5.49% top rate; HSA recognized as deductible)
- 🔴 California — $978 (no state HSA deduction; only federal + FICA savings apply)
- 🔴 New Jersey — $978 (no state HSA deduction; same as California situation)
- 🔴 New York — $1,561 (10.9% top marginal; HSA is deductible — one of the highest savers)
- 🔴 Oregon — $1,531 (9.9% top rate; HSA recognized)
Source: IRS Publication 15-T + state revenue departments · 22% federal bracket assumed · savings include FICA
Note the inversion: California and New Jersey residents get the worst HSA deal, saving only $978 — the same as maxing an FSA federally. New York residents, despite the high state rate, actually save the most because the HSA deduction offsets that rate. For more on this topic, see our guide: BMI Chart for Adults 2026: What Your Number Actually Means.
Quick Answers About FSAs and HSAs in 2026
What’s the HSA contribution limit for 2026? $4,300 for self-only coverage, $8,550 for family. People 55 and older can add a $1,000 catch-up contribution on top — that’s $5,300 individual or $9,550 family.
What’s the FSA contribution limit for 2026? $3,300. Your employer sets the actual limit — it can be lower, not higher. The rollover cap is $660 for 2026.
Can I use HSA funds for non-medical expenses? Yes, but only without penalty after age 65. Before 65, non-qualified withdrawals get hit with income tax plus a 20% penalty — worse than an early IRA withdrawal.
What counts as a qualified medical expense? Doctor visits, prescriptions, dental, vision, mental health, and hundreds of other items. Over-the-counter medications and menstrual products have counted since the CARES Act in 2020. Full list in IRS Publication 502.
Does my HSA balance affect financial aid? For federal financial aid (FAFSA), HSA balances are generally not counted as reportable assets. Check with your school’s financial aid office for institution-specific rules.
Three Moves That Add Real Money to Your Health Account
1. Invest your HSA balance — don’t let it sit as cash. Most HSA custodians (Fidelity, Lively, HSA Bank) offer investment options once your balance clears a threshold, typically $500–$1,000. A $4,300 balance in a low-cost index fund at 6% average return is worth $7,700 in 10 years. As cash: still $4,300.
2. Max the HSA before the tax deadline, not just year-end. HSA contributions can be made any time up to the filing deadline — April 15, 2027 for the 2026 tax year. Short on cash in January? You can still get the full $4,300 in by April and claim the deduction on your 2026 return.
3. Audit your FSA balance before the forfeiture date. An FSA with a December 31 deadline and a November balance of $400 means $400 gone. Spend it on glasses, dental work, eligible OTC items, replacement contacts. Your employer keeps that money otherwise.
💡 Estimated Annual Tax Savings: No Account vs. FSA vs. HSA vs. Both (2026 · 22% Bracket)
Scenario Annual tax savings vs. No account No pre-tax health account $0 — Max FSA only ($3,300) $978 +$978 Max HSA only ($4,300) $1,275 +$1,275 Max HSA + Limited-Purpose FSA ($4,300 + $3,300) $2,253 +$2,253 Estimated · 22% federal bracket · includes FICA savings from payroll deduction · IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-19
FAQ
Which is better, an FSA or HSA? For most people on an HDHP: HSA. Higher limit, rolls over, invests, portable. The FSA wins only when you’re not HDHP-eligible or need the front-loaded January 1 balance to cover a known expense early in the year.
What happens to my FSA if I quit mid-year? You lose access immediately. Any unspent balance returns to your employer. If you spent more than you contributed — which is legal — you don’t owe the difference back. That front-loading feature is one of the FSA’s actual advantages.
Can I open an HSA on my own if my employer doesn’t offer one? Yes, as long as you’re enrolled in a qualifying HDHP. Fidelity’s HSA has no fees, no minimums, and full investment access — the strongest individual option on the market right now.
Is the HSA really a retirement account? Functionally, yes. After 65, non-medical withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income — same as a traditional IRA. Qualified medical withdrawals stay tax-free at any age. It’s the only triple-tax-advantaged account the IRS allows: deductible contributions, tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals for medical costs.
What if I contribute to an HSA but wasn’t eligible the whole year? There’s a last-month rule: HSA-eligible on December 1 means you can contribute the full annual amount. But you must stay eligible through the following December 31 or you’ll owe taxes and a 10% penalty on the excess. Check with a CPA if you switched plans mid-year.
Check Your Exact Scenario
The FSA vs HSA decision hinges on your health plan, your expected costs, and your tax bracket. Run your numbers here: For more on this topic, see our guide: How Many Calories to Lose 1 Pound per Week: The Exact Numbers for 2026.