What Is an HSA?
A Health Savings Account (HSA) is a tax-advantaged savings account available to people enrolled in a qualifying High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP). It's often called the "triple tax advantage" account because:
- Contributions are tax-deductible — money you put in reduces your taxable income for the year
- Growth is tax-deferred — dividends and investment gains inside the account are not taxed while they stay in the account
- Withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free — paying for doctors, prescriptions, dental, vision, and other eligible expenses costs you nothing in taxes
No common account type offers all three of these tax benefits. A Roth IRA is tax-free on the back end but contributions are after-tax. A 401(k) is tax-deductible on the front end but taxable on withdrawal. An HSA is all three — for qualified medical spending.
After age 65, you can withdraw HSA money for any purpose (not just medical) — you'll pay ordinary income tax on non-medical withdrawals, similar to a traditional IRA.
Who Can Actually Open an HSA?
To open and contribute to an HSA, you generally must:
- Be enrolled in a qualifying High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP)
- Not be enrolled in Medicare
- Not be claimed as a dependent on someone else's tax return
- Have a Social Security Number or qualify as a lawful permanent resident — financial institutions set their own identity verification standards, and most require an SSN or green card
The IRS rules for HSA eligibility do not specifically exclude ITIN holders, but in practice most banks and HSA custodians require an SSN to open the account. ITIN holders who are tax residents but lack an SSN are typically turned away at the account-opening step.
Who Among the Immigrant Community May Be Eligible
If you have a Social Security Number through any of the following, you may be able to open an HSA — confirm with your employer's benefits administrator and the specific institution:
- DACA recipients with an active Employment Authorization Document (EAD) and SSN
- TPS (Temporary Protected Status) holders with an EAD and SSN
- Work visa holders (H-1B, L-1, O-1, etc.) with an SSN
- Lawful permanent residents (green card holders)
If you have an SSN and are enrolled in an HDHP through your employer, ask your HR or benefits department about HSA enrollment during your next open enrollment period.
2026 HSA and HDHP Numbers (IRS-Confirmed)
For calendar year 2026, the IRS set the following limits:
| Category | Self-Only | Family |
|---|---|---|
| HSA contribution limit | $4,400 | $8,750 |
| HDHP minimum deductible | $1,700 | $3,400 |
| HDHP max out-of-pocket | $8,500 | $17,000 |
Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19. Limits adjust annually — confirm at irs.gov each year.
What Changed With the One Big Beautiful Bill (2025)
The One Big Beautiful Bill, signed in July 2025, made several HSA-related changes that took effect in 2026:
- Telehealth is permanently HSA-compatible: You can use telehealth services before meeting your HDHP deductible without losing HSA eligibility. This was a temporary provision that the OBBB made permanent.
- Bronze and catastrophic plans now qualify: Bronze and catastrophic ACA marketplace plans are now considered HSA-compatible HDHPs, expanding who can pair an HSA with their marketplace coverage.
- Direct primary care (DPC) fees: Monthly fees paid to a direct primary care doctor can now be paid from an HSA tax-free, and enrolling in a DPC arrangement doesn't disqualify you from contributing to an HSA.
These changes expand access for people who are already eligible — they do not change the SSN/immigration status requirements that most financial institutions impose for account opening.
What ITIN Holders Can Do Instead
If you cannot open an HSA, these are the most practical alternatives for managing healthcare costs:
Flexible Spending Account (FSA)
If your employer offers an FSA through a benefits plan, ask whether it is available regardless of immigration status. FSAs also let you pay for qualified medical expenses with pre-tax dollars. The main differences from an HSA: FSAs are "use it or lose it" (typically at year-end), they are employer-tied (you lose it if you change jobs), and they cannot be invested. Ask your HR department about your options during open enrollment.
Community Health Centers
Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) provide primary care, dental, and mental health services on a sliding-scale fee basis — costs are based on income, not immigration status. Use findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov to locate one near you.
Dedicated Savings Account for Medical Costs
Without an HSA, set aside money in a separate savings account for medical expenses. It won't be tax-advantaged, but having a dedicated medical reserve prevents health costs from derailing other financial goals.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can ITIN holders open an HSA?
Generally no. Financial institutions that offer HSAs typically require a Social Security Number or proof of lawful permanent residency — not just an ITIN. If you have an SSN through DACA, TPS, a work visa, or other status, you may be eligible — check with your employer and health plan administrator.
What are the HSA contribution limits for 2026?
The IRS set the 2026 HSA contribution limit at $4,400 for self-only coverage and $8,750 for family coverage. These adjust annually — confirm current limits at irs.gov.
What is the triple tax advantage of an HSA?
Contributions are tax-deductible, growth is tax-deferred inside the account, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are completely tax-free. No other common savings account provides all three of these benefits simultaneously.
What can ITIN holders do instead of an HSA?
Ask your employer about a Flexible Spending Account (FSA), which may be available regardless of immigration status. Community health centers (FQHCs) offer sliding-scale care. A dedicated savings account for medical costs, while not tax-advantaged, prevents health expenses from disrupting other financial goals.
What changed with HSAs under the One Big Beautiful Bill?
The OBBB (signed July 2025) made telehealth services permanently HSA-compatible before meeting the deductible, made bronze and catastrophic ACA plans HSA-qualified, and allowed direct primary care fees to be paid from an HSA. These changes expand access for those already eligible — they do not change SSN/immigration status requirements for account opening.