Inflation Drives IRS to Raise HSA Contribution Limits

For 2024, the HSA contribution will be $4,150 for an individual and $8,300 for a family, up from $3,850 for an individual and $7,750 in 2023. 

The IRS announced Tuesday that health savings account contribution limits for 2024 are being increased due to inflation. 

For 2024, the maximum HSA contribution will be $4,150 for an individual and $8,300 for a family, the IRS announced Tuesday. This is up from $3,850 for an individual and $7,750 in 2023. 

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The annual inflation-adjusted limit on HSA contributions for self-only coverage under a high-deductible health plan is now $3,850, up from $3,650 in 2022. The HSA contribution limit for family coverage will be $7,750, up from $7,300. 

According to SHRM, contribution limits are adjusted for inflation (rounded to the nearest $50) annually, using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for the 12-month period ending on March 21. The catch-up contribution amount of $1,000 available to those older than 55, however, is fixed by statute. 

The 2023 adjustments represented an approximately 5.5% increase from 2022 contribution limits, whereas the limit only rose by 1.4% from 2021 to 2022. 

For 2022, the IRS raised the yearly deduction limit for individuals with self-only coverage under an HDHP to 3,650, a $50 increase from 2021. The annual limitation on deductions for an individual with family coverage under an HDHP was raised to $7,300, a $100 increase from the previous year.  

High-deductible health plans are often paired with health savings accounts as an additional workplace benefit for employees. Assets in health savings accounts continue to rise year-over-year, growing to reach a landmark $100 billion threshold last year, according to research from HSA consultant Devenir Group LLC.  

The higher contribution limit will go into effect for calendar year 2024, along with minimum deductible and maximum out-of-pocket expenses for the HDHPs that are paired with HSAs. 

In addition, the IRS released that an HDHP must have a deductible of at least $1,600 for self-only coverage, up from $1,500 in 2023, or $3,200 for family coverage, up from $3,000.  

The IRS also announced it will raise the maximum amount that employers may contribute to an excepted-benefit health reimbursement arrangement in 2024 to $2,100—up from the 2023 amount of $1,950. 

“Healthy and happy employees make for happy employers,” says Jason Bornhorst, CEO and co-founder of First Dollar. “These adjustments allow employees to save on healthcare costs and taxes, which is good for plan sponsors.” 

To be eligible to contribute to an HSA, a participant must have an HSA-qualified HDHP and not be enrolled in Medicare.  

Common Pitfalls in Reg BE, BI, According to FINRA, SEC

Riskier and complicated assets require more due diligence, and regulatory officials laid out some practices for advisers to avoid.


At the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s annual conference, enforcement leaders from the Securities and Exchange Commission and FINRA elaborated on some of the common problems they encounter during exams on compliance with both Reg BI and Reg BE.

Reg BI

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On Reg BI, Gurbir Grewal, the director of the SEC’s division of enforcement, noted an SEC complaint from June 2022 in which the SEC charged Western International Securities with marketing a high-risk and illiquid debt security to retail and retirement investors when the issuer recommended it be marketed to wealthier investors due to its riskier nature. Because there was no reasonable basis to market the security in this way, it violated the care obligation as required under Reg BI.

Nicole McCafferty, vice president of examinations for FINRA, elaborated on the same point later in the conference. She said advisers must consider a range of alternatives when giving advice to clients, but it is especially important when recommending securities that are relatively risky or complicated. James Wrona, vice president and associate general counsel for FINRA, added that assets in this category could include investments such as: investments traded on margin, cryptocurrency, penny stocks, private placements and asset-backed securities. Wrona said advisers should have specific training and procedures related to these assets.

McCafferty said that merely having a client sign a statement acknowledging the risk involved with an investment, a practice McCafferty says she has noticed, is not adequate to meet the standard of Reg BI. The adviser must clearly explain the risks to the client and how those risks fit into their stated goals and existing portfolio. McCafferty said advisers should document such transactions to ensure an adviser can prove compliance with Reg BI, including when a client goes against an adviser’s advice and invests in something that the adviser believes is not in their best interest. The adviser could be asked to justify such an investment during a FINRA exam and having that documentation would be valuable.

She recommended that advisers begin with basic due diligence and knowledge of specific investments before even turning to the specific needs of a client. She finds advisers often know their customers well but are not as familiar with the products they are advising as they ought to be.

Another common refrain from SEC and FINRA officials during the conference was that merely disclosing conflicts of interest is not adequate; attempts to mitigate those conflicts must also be made. McCafferty said an advisory firm cannot disclose to clients that they hold regular sales contests and rely on that disclosure to satisfy their obligation under the regulation. A sales contest creates a conflict that must be eliminated because of the incentive structure it creates, putting the firms’ interests or its employees’ interests ahead of clients’ interests.

When FINRA conducts examinations, its officials also look for corrective action related to past failure notices, McCafferty explained. Such follow-up exams that look for changes are not limited to past FINRA exams. FINRA will also examine failures noted by the SEC and state-level authorities, and FINRA examiners expect to see corrective actions based on those observations.

Reg BE

On Reg BE, which addresses trade execution, Chris Kelly, senior vice president and acting head of enforcement at FINRA, noted two recent cases in which broker/dealers routed orders to affiliated trading systems without looking for better pricing in other trading systems. This behavior is a violation of Reg BE, because if an unaffiliated trading venue can offer a better price, the broker should execute the trade on that venue instead. Kelly explained that this is not a failure based on “technicality or nuance,” but instead is “a complete failure.”

Kelly warned of some of the risks associated with finance professionals who are registered simultaneously as both a financial adviser and as a broker/dealer. He highlighted a pattern of dual registrants moving securities back and forth between brokerage and advisory accounts to drive up fees. For example, Kelly said he has seen some dual registrants who charge clients to buy securities in their capacity as a broker, only to transfer those securities to an advisory account so they can also charge advisory fees on the same assets.

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