Starting in 2026, more people will qualify for HSAs, and more expenses will be covered. Some FSA limits will increase for the first time in nearly 40 years.
Key takeaways:
If you’re looking to reduce your out-of-pocket healthcare costs, you might consider using a health savings account (HSA) or a flexible spending account (FSA) if you’re eligible. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), a federal law signed by President Donald Trump on July 4, 2025, brings some of the biggest updates these accounts have seen in decades.
GoodRx, a platform for medication savings, shares which changes are set to take place and how they could help you save more on healthcare.
An HSA is a tax-advantaged account available to those with a qualified high-deductible health plan (HDHP). You can use the money in the account to pay for qualified medical expenses, such as prescription medications, copays, and dental care.
HSAs were created by Congress in 2003 and became effective in 2004. With the OBBBA, HSAs are getting some of their biggest updates since they were introduced. Here’s what’s changing:
Beginning in 2026, more Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace plans will qualify as HSA-eligible. This includes bronze and catastrophic plans that have not met the definition of a high-deductible health plan. This change could increase the number of HSA-eligible individuals on the marketplace to 10 million, according to The White House.
Bronze plans usually offer the lowest monthly premium on the marketplace. They come with higher deductibles, which means you pay more out of pocket before your insurance starts cost-sharing for your healthcare.
Catastrophic plans are low-cost, worst-case-scenario insurance with high deductibles meant to protect people from exorbitant medical debt. They are available to people under age 30 or to adults of any age who qualify for an exemption due to financial hardship.
DPC is a model in which you pay a healthcare professional a flat monthly fee for routine primary care services instead of going through insurance for every visit. According to a Hint Health survey, DPC memberships grew 241% from 2017 to 2021.
Starting January 1, 2026, people can use their HSAs to pay for DPC membership fees. But the membership must meet the new federal requirements. Previously, DPC was considered similar to health insurance. It generally did not qualify as an HSA-eligible expense.
To qualify as an HSA-eligible expense, the membership must meet the following requirements:
With telehealth, you can visit a healthcare professional by video or phone instead of going into an office. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress temporarily allowed telehealth to be offered before the deductible without causing someone to lose HSA eligibility. OBBBA makes this flexibility permanent, starting with plans that began on or after January 1, 2025.
Under OBBBA, HDHPs can cover telehealth and other remote services before you meet your deductible. Doing so will not affect your ability to contribute to an HSA. Telehealth must still meet federal medical standards.
A flexible spending account (FSA) lets employees set aside pretax money to pay for certain out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. Health FSAs can help you pay for medical, dental, and vision costs. Dependent care FSAs (DCFSAs) work differently. They help cover certain childcare or dependent care expenses, such as preschool, summer day camp, or care for an adult dependent who cannot attend to themselves. OBBBA affects the dependent care FSA rules, not health FSAs.
DCFSA rules have stayed mostly the same since they were introduced in 1986, when the contribution limit was set at $5,000 per household ($2,500 for married couples filing separately). This limit briefly increased in 2021 under the American Rescue Plan Act, but only for that plan year.
Beginning in 2026, the OBBBA permanently raises the dependent care FSA contribution limit to $7,500 per household and $3,750 for married couples filing separately.
Here’s an overview of how the limits have changed:
There were various proposals circulating in recent years to change tax-advantaged accounts. But most of those ideas did not make it into OBBA. The final law included only certain HSA and dependent care FSA updates and left many other rules unchanged. Here’s what’s staying the same for HSAs and FSAs:
The IRS increased the 2026 HSA and health FSA contribution limits. HSA limits increased from $4,300 in 2025 to $4,400 in 2026 for self-only coverage and from $8,550 in 2025 to $8,750 in 2026 for family coverage. The health FSA limit also increased from $3,300 to $3,400 in 2026. These annual adjustments will continue since both HSAs and FSAs remain indexed for inflation.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act includes some of the biggest updates to HSAs and dependent care FSAs in decades. Starting in 2026, more people will qualify for HSAs, direct primary care memberships will count as a qualified expense, and dependent care FSAs (DCFSAs) will see a permanent contribution increase to $7,500 per household. And beginning with plans on or after January 1, 2025, HDHPs can cover telehealth and other remote services before you meet your deductible without affecting HSA eligibility.
If you’re eligible for an HSA or a DCFSA, weigh the benefits to see whether these accounts make sense for your needs and budget.
This story was produced by GoodRx and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
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