Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not touch ours. It is a retirement tool for later use. All is invested.
Family of 4, two boys in sports. Have had our share of er visits. Still ends up cheaper than paying the high premiums for the no deductible plans.
+1 although obviously if something god-awful happened, it's nice to know there's some money we could draw upon.
Anonymous wrote:We do not touch ours. It is a retirement tool for later use. All is invested.
Family of 4, two boys in sports. Have had our share of er visits. Still ends up cheaper than paying the high premiums for the no deductible plans.
Anonymous wrote:We do not touch ours. It is a retirement tool for later use. All is invested.
Family of 4, two boys in sports. Have had our share of er visits. Still ends up cheaper than paying the high premiums for the no deductible plans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not touch ours. It is a retirement tool for later use. All is invested.
Family of 4, two boys in sports. Have had our share of er visits. Still ends up cheaper than paying the high premiums for the no deductible plans.
Do you have a separate medical expense fund? Or do you just pull from emergency savings? Or have the expenses been minimal enough that it hasn't registered as an issue and you just use banking/credit?
I'm wondering for those who invest and don't touch the HSA, what do you use as your medical expense safety pot?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So does it make sense to choose the HSA in the Fed plans? By comparison, BCBS Basic for a family is $177 per payperiod.
Whether or not you have a high deductible health plan is a separate question entirely, with many many variables to consider. I'm OP here and am crowdsourcing for those who do have HDHPs and thus HSAs, how do you spend/invest/save the money?
I'm more curious than needing advice. I don't know many people with these plans and wonder how they are generally treated.
Anonymous wrote:So does it make sense to choose the HSA in the Fed plans? By comparison, BCBS Basic for a family is $177 per payperiod.
Anonymous wrote:We do not touch ours. It is a retirement tool for later use. All is invested.
Family of 4, two boys in sports. Have had our share of er visits. Still ends up cheaper than paying the high premiums for the no deductible plans.