The post The HSA Receipt Trick: Pay Medical Bills Now, Reimburse Yourself in 30 Years, Grow the Money Tax-Free in Between appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
If you have a Health Savings Account, you already own one of the strangest tax loopholes in the IRS code, and almost nobody uses it. Here it is: you can pay a medical bill out of pocket today, hold the receipt for 10, 20, or 30 years, and reimburse yourself tax-free whenever you want, while the money inside the HSA grows untouched. That is the HSA receipt trick, and it turns your health savings account into a stealth Roth IRA with no contribution income limit.
Most people treat an HSA like a checking account. Bill comes in, swipe the HSA debit card, done. The buried rule says you do not have to. As long as the qualified medical expense was incurred after your HSA was opened, and you did not already deduct it or get reimbursed elsewhere, you can pay yourself back from the HSA years or decades later. In the meantime, the cash stays invested and compounds tax-free.
The authority is IRS Notice 2004-50, Q&A 39, which states that an account beneficiary may defer reimbursement of qualified medical expenses to later taxable years, as long as the expense was incurred after the HSA was established and has not been previously reimbursed or taken as an itemized deduction. The IRS has never imposed a time limit on the reimbursement. That is the entire trick, written into federal guidance.
You qualify if you are enrolled in an HSA-eligible high-deductible health plan (HDHP) and have an open HSA. You cannot be enrolled in Medicare, be claimed as a dependent, or have other disqualifying coverage (like a general-purpose FSA) during the months you contribute. Once you are on Medicare, you stop contributing, but the trick still works: you can keep reimbursing yourself for old receipts forever.
Worth noting: contributions go in pre-tax, grow tax-free, and come out tax-free for qualified medical expenses. No other account in the U.S. code offers all three.
Three traps will wreck this. First, the expense must have been incurred after your HSA was opened. A bill from before the account existed does not count, ever. Second, you can only use each receipt once. If you already claimed it as an itemized medical deduction on Schedule A, it is burned. Third, if you cannot produce the receipt during an audit, that “reimbursement” becomes a non-qualified distribution, which means ordinary income tax plus a 20% penalty if you are under 65. Lose the paper trail, lose the loophole.
One more: heirs other than a spouse do not inherit the tax-free treatment. A non-spouse beneficiary owes ordinary income tax on the full HSA balance the year you die. So if you stockpile decades of receipts, cash them in while you are alive, or at least let your spouse do it.
For context on the opportunity cost of leaving HSA dollars in cash, the 10-year Treasury yield sat at 4.43% on June 16, 2026, the risk-free benchmark your invested HSA should beat over a multi-decade horizon. Every HSA comes with investment options; using them is what turns a healthcare account into a retirement weapon.
Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.
The post The HSA Receipt Trick: Pay Medical Bills Now, Reimburse Yourself in 30 Years, Grow the Money Tax-Free in Between appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


