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.
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.
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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.