Submitted by Old-Energy-6638 t3_zzng17 in personalfinance

I have "Smart Choice Alight HSA" given by my employer, I want to transfer all my HSA into Fidelity and start investing HSA. How do I do that? Is that possible? What are the tax repercussions, and is HSA transfer bi-weekly possible, from my employer's given HSA account to Fidelity

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Roadripper1995 t1_j2cs9m7 wrote

I wanted to do this as well. My employer uses HealthEquity HSA and I have a Fidelity HSA. I did a one time transfer imitated from Fidelity. Unfortunately HealthEquity messed it up and ended up transferring everything and closing my account. It was a pain trying to get it opened back up so that my paycheck contributions could continue.

Anyway, you can do it without any tax penalty. The safest way is to go online to Fidelity and ask them to initiate the transfer. You can in theory do that as often as you wish

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Old-Energy-6638 OP t1_j2do7pm wrote

Thank you for replying. That's my fear as well, if I move to Fidelity whether the contributions will get affected

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plowt-kirn t1_j2e214w wrote

Leave $1 behind so they don't close the account.

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KeyLime746 t1_j2d5o15 wrote

Yes it's possible, you can open an HSA anywhere in addition to the one through your employer.

However, you should always contribute via payroll when possible to avoid FICA taxes. Sometimes you can convince your employer to deposit your payroll HSA contributions to the account of your choice, but most of the time you have to use theirs for that method of contributions.

In that case you will need to transfer regularly from your work HSA to your preferred one. Two ways to do this:

  1. Trustee-to-trustee transfer. This is similar to transferring money from one bank account to the other. It goes directly, and the IRS places no limit on how much you do this per year. However, some HSA providers charge a fee for this, so avoid it in that case and instead do:

  2. Indirect Rollover. You manually withdraw the funds (via transfers/checks) and then deposit it into your preferred HSA, and fill out some forms. This doesn't cost fees, but the IRS only lets you do it once every rolling one year period.

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trilliumsummer t1_j2f7b4q wrote

Make sure to read your employers fees. Mine charges for the rollovers, so I do mine once a year. It sucks, but still cheaper than their monthly fee to invest.

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