2026 HSA Contribution Limits: The Complete Guide
- Saving Wiser

- Apr 23
- 4 min read
Updated: 5 days ago

Every year the IRS adjusts HSA contribution limits for inflation.
In 2026 the limits increased again. If you have not checked your contribution rate recently there is a good chance you are missing out on tax-free savings.
Here is everything you need to know about 2026 HSA limits — and more importantly how to use every dollar wisely.
2026 HSA Contribution Limits
Coverage Type | 2026 Limit | 2025 Limit | Change |
Self-only | $4,400 | $4,300 | +$100 |
Family | $8,750 | $8,550 | +$200 |
Catch-up 55+ | $1,000 | $1,000 | No change |
Self-only plus catch-up | $5,400 | $5,300 | +$100 |
Family plus catch-up | $9,750 | $9,550 | +$200 |
Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19 — irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rp-25-19.pdf
What Changed in 2026
Two meaningful updates worth knowing:
Contribution limits increased: Self-only up $100. Family up $200. Modest increases but every dollar contributed pre-tax saves you real money.
Expanded eligibility — big change: Starting in 2026 all Bronze and Catastrophic ACA Marketplace plans qualify as HDHPs. Millions of Americans who previously couldn't open an HSA now can.
Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19 healthcare.gov
Who Qualifies in 2026
To contribute to an HSA you must be:
Enrolled in a qualifying HDHP
Not covered by any other non-HDHP health insurance
Not enrolled in Medicare
Not claimed as a dependent on someone else's taxes
2026 HDHP minimum requirements:
Coverage | Minimum Deductible | Maximum Out of Pocket |
Self-only | $1,650 | $8,300 |
Family | $3,300 | $16,600 |
Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19
What the Tax Savings Actually Look Like
The real value of HSA contributions is not the dollar amount — it is what those dollars are worth after tax savings.
At a 24% federal tax bracket:
Self-only maximum $4,400 → $1,056 in federal tax savings
Family maximum $8,750 → $2,100 in federal tax savings
That is real money back — before state tax savings and before a single dollar is spent on qualified health expenses.

Your actual savings depend on your individual tax situation. Consult a qualified tax professional. Source: IRS Publication 969 — irs.gov/publications/p969
Monthly Contribution Breakdown
Breaking the annual maximum into manageable monthly amounts:
Coverage Type | Annual Max | Monthly |
Self-only | $4,400 | $367 |
Family | $8,750 | $729 |
Self-only 55+ | $5,400 | $450 |
Family 55+ | $9,750 | $813 |
If your employer contributes — those dollars count toward your limit. Adjust accordingly.
The Triple Tax Advantage — A Quick Reminder

Your HSA is the only account in the US tax code with three layers of tax advantage:
Contributions go in pre-tax — reducing taxable income
Growth is completely tax-free
Withdrawals for qualified expenses are tax-free
No 401k. No IRA. No Roth IRA. Nothing else does all three.
Source: IRS Publication 969 — irs.gov/publications/p969
Consider Investing Your Unused Balance
Most HSA balances earn minimal interest sitting in cash. The smarter move is investing.
We invest our Fidelity HSA balance in a low-cost index fund. Every dollar of growth is completely tax-free.
The simple math — $8,750 contributed annually invested at 7% average annual return:
10 years → approximately $120,800
20 years → approximately $380,500
Versus sitting in cash — $87,500 and $175,000 respectively.
The difference is entirely tax-free.
Investing involves risk including possible loss of principal. Consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions. Source: IRS Publication 969 — irs.gov/publications/p969
Where To Keep Your HSA
Not all HSA accounts are equal. Look for:
Zero or low fees
No or low minimum balance to invest
Broad investment options
Easy reimbursement process
Our choice — Fidelity HSA: Zero fees. Full investment options. No minimum to invest. Easy reimbursement.
Strong alternative — Lively HSA: Free for individuals. Investing through Schwab. Clean interface.
If your employer-provided HSA has high fees or limited investment options — consider rolling it over to Fidelity. Rollovers do not count against your annual limit.
Sources: Fidelity HSA — fidelity.com/go/hsa Lively — livelyme.com
The Contribution Deadline
You have until the tax filing deadline to contribute for the current tax year.
2026 contribution deadline: April 15, 2027
Did not contribute enough during the year? You can still make 2026 contributions up to that date and claim the deduction on your 2026 return.
Source: IRS Publication 969 — irs.gov/publications/p969
What To Do With Those HSA Dollars
Contributing is only step one. Using your HSA strategically is where the real savings happen.
Your HSA covers far more than copays and prescriptions — supplements with an LMN, wearables, labs, smart scales, sunscreen, and much more.
We cover everything in detail throughout Saving Wiser. Start here:
2026 HSA Limits — Quick FAQ
What are the 2026 HSA contribution limits?
$4,400 self-only. $8,750 family. $1,000 catch-up for those 55 and older.
Did HSA limits go up in 2026?
Yes. Self-only up $100. Family up $200 from 2025.
Do employer contributions count toward the limit?
Yes. All contributions combined cannot exceed the annual maximum.
What is the HSA contribution deadline for 2026?
April 15, 2027 — the federal tax filing deadline.
What happens if I over-contribute?
A 6% excise tax applies to excess contributions for each year they remain in the account. Withdraw excess before the filing deadline to avoid the penalty.
Can I have an HSA and FSA?
Generally no — except a limited purpose FSA covering only dental and vision.
Source: IRS Publication 969 — irs.gov/publications/p969
It's Your Turn
Log into your HSA right now.
Check your contribution rate. Compare it to the 2026 maximum. Check whether your balance is sitting in cash or invested.
Two quick adjustments — increasing contributions and investing your balance — could be worth hundreds to thousands in tax-free savings over time.
That is saving wiser.
To smarter savings, The Saving Wiser Team
Disclaimer: HSA contribution limits and eligibility rules are subject to change. Always verify current limits at irs.gov. This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation. Investing involves risk.




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