Phase 2 · Wealth & Leverage

HSA Triple Tax Advantage Calculator

Deductible going in, tax-free growth, tax-free out for medical — no other account gets all three. See what the HSA's triple tax break is actually worth against a plain taxable account.

Your inputs

Five levers. Both accounts re-solve on every tick.

$4000

Pre-tax income you devote each year (HSA limits apply).

24%

Your combined federal + state marginal rate.

30 yr

How long it compounds before you spend it.

7%

Expected average annual return.

15%

Long-term capital-gains rate on the brokerage alternative.

HSA advantage
Extra spendable vs a taxable account.
HSA value (all spendable)
Taxable account, after tax
Upfront deduction value
HSA is bigger by

Under the hood

The math, fully exposed

Both accounts are funded from the same pre-tax budget each year, compounded as an annuity:

Growth factor = ((1 + r)n − 1) ÷ r  (r = annual return, n = years)
HSA = budget × growth factor  (deductible in, tax-free growth, tax-free out)
Taxable invested = budget × (1 − tax) × growth factor
Taxable after tax = value − (value − contributions) × capital-gains rate
HSA advantage = HSA − taxable after tax
  • Three breaks, stacked: the full pre-tax dollar goes in, it compounds with zero tax drag, and qualified medical withdrawals are never taxed — each layer compounds on the last.
  • The taxable account loses twice: it starts smaller (after-tax dollars) and gives back a slice of its gains at the end. The HSA does neither.
  • Don't leave it in cash: the entire advantage assumes the balance is invested. An HSA earning nothing throws away its rarest feature — tax-free growth.

Your directives

What to do next, based on your numbers

Adjust the sliders to generate tailored recommendations.

Answers

Frequently asked questions

What is the HSA triple tax advantage?
A Health Savings Account is taxed favorably at all three stages. One: contributions are tax-deductible (and avoid FICA if made through payroll). Two: the money grows completely tax-free — no tax on interest, dividends or capital gains. Three: withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free. No other account — not a 401(k), not a Roth — gets all three. That is why a maxed, invested HSA is widely considered the most efficient dollar in personal finance.
How is an HSA better than a regular brokerage account?
A taxable brokerage account is funded with after-tax dollars and taxes your gains when you sell. The HSA skips both: the full pre-tax dollar goes in, it compounds with zero drag, and qualified medical withdrawals are never taxed. This calculator funds both from the same pre-tax budget so the comparison is honest — the gap you see is the pure value of the three tax breaks stacked together.
What if I do not have medical expenses to spend it on?
You almost certainly will — the average couple spends six figures on healthcare in retirement. You can also save receipts and reimburse yourself years later, tax-free. And after age 65, an HSA acts like a Traditional IRA: withdrawals for any purpose are allowed, taxed as ordinary income (no penalty). So the worst case still matches a 401(k); the best case beats everything.
Who can contribute to an HSA?
You must be covered by a qualifying high-deductible health plan (HDHP) and not be enrolled in Medicare or claimed as a dependent. Annual limits are set by the IRS and adjust yearly, with a catch-up for those 55 and older. The biggest mistake is treating an HSA as a spending account — leaving it in cash. Invested and left to compound, it is a stealth retirement account. This is an educational model; confirm eligibility and limits with a professional.