As healthcare costs continue to rise, employers are looking for flexible, tax-efficient ways to support their employees and show them they care. Pairing an individual coverage health reimbursement arrangement (ICHRA) with a health savings account (HSA) can be a good way to accomplish this goal, as both benefits provide employers with predictable costs while giving employees greater control over their medical care. But you must coordinate these two benefits correctly to take advantage of their perks.
This article explains how ICHRAs and HSAs work, and how to implement both health benefits together compliantly.
In this blog post, you’ll learn:
- How an ICHRA and an HSA work, including their eligibility rules, tax advantages, and ownership details.
- The key differences between an ICHRA and an HSA for both employers and employees.
- The steps employers must take to successfully implement an ICHRA and an HSA together.
An ICHRA is a flexible, tax-advantaged benefit that allows employers to offer their employees contributions for individual health insurance premiums. Depending on the plan details, out-of-pocket medical care expenses outlined in IRS Publication 502 may also be eligible for reimbursement1.
With an ICHRA, employers decide how much to contribute each month based on their budget and employee benefits strategy. There are no annual contribution limits, and employers can tailor allowances by employee class, age, or family size. These customization abilities make it a flexible and affordable alternative to a traditional group health plan.
Employees who participate must enroll in a qualifying individual health insurance plan that provides minimum essential coverage (MEC). Once they submit proof of insurance coverage, the plan administrator can contribute toward their premiums, up to their set contribution amount.
Remodel Health simplifies this process by allowing your employees to shop for coverage on the ICHRA+® platform and automatically substantiating active coverage. Our AutoPay system also ensures contributions are applied to employee premiums each month, eliminating the need for traditional ICHRA reimbursements.
ICHRA contributions are tax-deductible for the employer and exempt from payroll taxes. Additionally, participating employees don’t have to pay income taxes on their ICHRA contributions.
An HSA is a personal savings account designed to help individuals pay for qualified medical expenses using pre-tax dollars. Employees can open and manage their own HSA, or employers may offer one as part of their benefits package. Both employers and employees can contribute to the account, as long as the total contributions don’t exceed the IRS’s annual limits2. Regardless of who set up the account, the employee always owns it and all the funds inside.
To be eligible for an HSA, the individual must have an HSA-qualified high deductible health plan (HDHP). Those who want to participate in the HSA can buy a plan on the individual market or enroll in an HSA-eligible employer-sponsored group health plan.
Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), passed by Congress on July 3, 2025, all bronze and catastrophic plans available on the public exchanges now qualify as HSA-eligible HDHPs3 for 2026 and beyond. This includes any off-exchange versions that offer substantially the same coverage as the on-exchange version. Learn more about the changes in IRS Notice 2026-5 in our article.
Individuals can use their HSA funds to pay for eligible medical expenses outlined in IRS Publication 502, such as deductibles, copays, and prescription medications. If someone younger than the age of 65 withdraws funds for non-medical expenses, they must pay income tax on the amount and a 20% penalty. After age 65, account holders may use HSA funds for any expense without penalty, though non-medical purchases are still subject to income tax.
HSA contributions are tax-deductible, earnings grow tax-free, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are also tax-free.
While an ICHRA and an HSA share some similarities, they differ in key ways. The table below highlights the main features of both benefits.
|
ICHRA |
HSA |
|
|
Eligibility |
Any employer with at least one W-2 employee can offer an ICHRA. Employees must have a qualifying individual health insurance plan to participate in the benefit. |
Employees must have an HSA-qualified HDHP to contribute to their HSA. On-exchange and equivalent off-exchange bronze and catastrophic plans are now HSA-qualified in 2026. |
|
Ownership |
The employer always owns the arrangement. With Remodel Health, unused funds remain with the employer at the end of the plan year. Unused ICHRA contributions always stay with the employer if an employee leaves their job. |
The employee always owns the account and keeps all funds, even after leaving the company. |
|
Contribution limits |
There are no annual contribution caps. Employers determine contributions based on their budget and goals, and fund the health benefit on their own. Employers can also vary allowance amounts by employee class, age, or family size. |
Annual IRS limits apply. In 2026, the maximum is $4,400 for self-only coverage and $8,750 for family health insurance coverage, with a $1,000 catch-up contribution for eligible individuals age 55 and older. The employee and employer can contribute to an HSA. |
|
Tax considerations |
Employer contributions are tax-deductible and not subject to payroll taxes. Employee reimbursements for eligible expenses are income tax-free. |
Contributions use pre-tax funds. Additionally, withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free. |
|
Eligible expenses |
Funds can cover or reimburse qualified medical expenses under IRS Publication 502, including individual health insurance premiums. |
Account holders can use HSA funds to buy qualified medical expenses outlined in IRS Publication 502. Health insurance premiums are typically ineligible, except in limited situations. |
Yes, employers can offer both an ICHRA and an HSA. But you must structure it correctly to comply with IRS rules.
Here are the steps you’ll need to take:
Offering an ICHRA and an HSA together is a great way to give your employees even greater control over their finances and healthcare. But you must have a premium-only ICHRA, provide clear employee communication, and follow compliance requirements to successfully provide both benefits and support your staff.
If you want to learn more about how an ICHRA can work with an HSA, Remodel Health is here to help. Book a call with us today, and we’ll help you offer both healthcare benefits compliantly.
This blog post was originally published on January 25, 2017. It was last updated on March 9, 2026.