News from ACS|BNY Mellon HSA Solution
Posted Jul.22, 2010 in HSA Plans
Following is important information from ACS |BNY Mellon HSA Solution:
Protect our environment, go paperless. At ACS|BNY Mellon HSA Solution, we would like to do our part to protect the environment by reducing the amount of printed material we generate.
If you are not already viewing your periodic HSA statement online; please “turn paper off” by following the four steps outlined below:
Logon to your HSA Web site
- Select “Update Account Profile” on the left side of the screen
- Click on “Edit” under “Your Statement Delivery Option”
- Click on “Agree” to acknowledge and accept the terms
Beginning in September, any account holder receiving a paper HSA statement will be charged $0.75 each time one is generated.
A customer service enhancement for our account holders. Effective July 19, 2010, you will be able to log on to your HSA Web site or call the HSA Solution Contact Center and update your personal data (i.e., residential address, mailing address, e-mail address, and phone number). We will no longer accept personal data changes from another source. We have changed the process to allow for direct ownership of personal information by the account owner.
HSA limits stay the same for 2011. For calendar year 2011, the maximum HSA contribution that can be made is $3,050 for employee-only coverage ($4,050 if you are age 55 or older and eligible to make catch-up contributions) and $6,150 for family coverage ($7,150 if you are age 55 or older and eligible to make catch-up contributions). The minimum deductible will stay at $1,200 for single coverage and $2,400 for family coverage. The maximum out-of-pocket employee expense, including deductibles, will stay at $5,950 for single coverage and $11,900 for family coverage. (IRS, 5/24/10)
Health care reform and HSAs. Outlined below are the health care reform changes with the most immediate impact on Health Savings Accounts:
- Amounts paid for over-the-counter drugs will no longer be qualified medical expenses eligible for reimbursement from an HAS unless the over-the-counter drug was prescribed by a doctor. The prescription requirement only applies to over-the-counter drugs. It does not apply to expenses for other over-the-counter items such as insulin and diabetic supplies, bandages, band-aids or contact lens supplies. These items continue to be reimbursable from an HSA without a doctor’s prescription. (Effective 1/1/2011)
- The penalty for reimbursements of nonqualified medical expenses from your HSA will increase from 10 to 20 percent. (Effective 1/1/2011)
NOTE: Do you have a dependent that is between the ages of 23 and 26? Parents who cover adult children via their employer’s high-deductible health plan option may be unable to use HSA funds to reimburse themselves on a tax-free basis for medical expenses incurred by those adult children.
Tags: health care reform, HSA, Mellon


