A Health Reimbursement Account, which is another term for Health Reimbursement Arrangement, or HRA, is a type of self-insured group health plan under which an employer makes available a specified maximum dollar amount to employees for the reimbursement of medical expenses and/or health insurance premiums. Here are some FAQs about Health Reimbursement Accounts.
Assuming certain IRS rules are met, HRA reimbursements are excludable from employees' gross income under Sections 105 and 106 of the Internal Revenue Code.
This is how an HRA works:
Health Reimbursement Accounts benefit employees because employees don’t pay taxes on the reimbursed expenses.
Depending on the HRA plan design, unused HRA dollars during a plan year may roll over to the next plan year.
Only eligible expenses can be reimbursed by an HRA. These expenses are defined by IRS rules and the HRA plan document.
Eligible expenses are those employees pay for out of pocket for medical care that’s provided to the employee, employee's spouse, and eligible dependents. Generally, IRS rules state that medical care includes items and services that are meant to diagnose, cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent illness or disease. Transportation that is primarily for medical care is also included. Health insurance premiums are also included to the extent that they have not already received favorable tax-treatment. Here are some examples:
Health plan deductible expense
Doctor’s office visit copay
Pharmacy expense
Individual health insurance premium
LASIK eye surgery
Double dipping refers to receiving a tax-advantage twice for the same medical expense. Double dipping is not allowed with Health Reimbursement Accounts. In other words, expenses reimbursed under a Health Reimbursement Account cannot be reimbursed under any other plan or program. Also, expenses reimbursed under a Health Reimbursement Account may not be deducted when on a personal tax return.
Expenses that are not approved are called “ineligible expenses.” These expenses include:
Cosmetic surgery and procedures, including teeth whitening
Herbs, vitamins, and supplements used for general health
OTC medicines that don’t have a prescription for (except insulin)
Family or marriage counseling
Personal use items such as toothpaste, shaving cream, and makeup
Prescription drugs imported from another country
Any other item or service that is not used for medical care as defined by IRS rules
No. A business fully controls the contribution amount for a health reimbursement account plan. There are no minimum or maximum requirements.
A Health Reimbursement Account may have an “accumulation limit.” This amount is a limit (or cap) on the total balance at any given time. If an employee reaches the accumulation limit, the employer will not contribute any more money until the funds in the HRA are used and the balance falls below the cap.
Typically, the business chooses the reimbursement schedule for an HRA plan. This could be daily, weekly, monthly or quarterly (or anything in between).
In most cases, yes, there is a time limit for submitting claims to a Health Reimbursement Account.