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Down to the Wire: Will We Have HSA with Pre-Deductible Telehealth in 2025?

By Amanda Karpovich & Jennifer Rigterink on December 19, 2024
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Important Update—Pre-Deductible Telehealth HSA Relief Ends on December 31, 2024: As discussed in our post below, although extension of the telehealth safe harbor was included in various bill drafts, the year-end spending bill signed into law on December 21, 2024 (American Relief Act, 2025) does not include pre-deductible telehealth relief.  This means that the telehealth services safe harbor will not be available for plan years starting on or after January 1, 2025. For more details on what this means for high-deductible health plan sponsors, read below.

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The telehealth services safe harbor for high deductible health plans (“HDHPs”) will expire for plan years starting on or after January 1, 2025, absent Congress passing legislation extending or making the safe harbor permanent.  While recent days suggest that Congress may pass legislation on telehealth before year-end (along with other relevant changes for plan sponsors, including pharmacy benefit manager reform), nothing is guaranteed and with the expiration date fast approaching, plan sponsors may want to consider next steps.

By way of background, under the normal rules, to be eligible to make or receive contributions to a health savings account (“HSA”), an individual must be covered by an HDHP.  Coverage for telehealth or other remote care services before the minimum deductible is satisfied would make an HDHP participant ineligible to make or receive HSA contributions.  This rule was waived for telehealth and remote care services as part of relief offered under the CARES Act and the relief was subsequently extended for plan years beginning before January 1, 2025.  If a participant is ineligible to make HSA contributions, any contributions made while ineligible would need to be included in the participant’s taxable income and would be subject to a 10% excise tax.  

Although an extension of pre-deductible telehealth relief is on Congress’s radar for inclusion in a year-end spending bill, the passage of that bill is uncertain at the moment.  Given the timing and uncertainty, plan sponsors may want to consider next steps if relief is not finalized before year-end.  For example, assuming the safe harbor expires, to maintain HSA eligibility for HDHP participants, plan sponsors may require that an HDHP participant pay fair market value for non-preventive telehealth and remote care services until the participant satisfies the minimum HDHP deductible. To the extent telehealth and remote care coverage changes, plan sponsors should remember to update plan documents and summary plan descriptions as needed and to timely communicate the changes to participants.

Photo of Amanda Karpovich Amanda Karpovich

Amanda M. Karpovich is a practice attorney in the Labor Department and a member of the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group. She assists for-profit and not-for-profit entities with their employee benefit programs by counseling clients regarding design, qualification, administration, and compliance issues…

Amanda M. Karpovich is a practice attorney in the Labor Department and a member of the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group. She assists for-profit and not-for-profit entities with their employee benefit programs by counseling clients regarding design, qualification, administration, and compliance issues associated with qualified retirement plans, health and welfare benefits, and fringe benefit programs. Amanda’s experience includes counseling clients regarding fiduciary and governance issues and structures, benefit aspects of corporate transactions, and claims and appeals processes. She also assists clients with preparing plan documents, summary plan descriptions, and other benefit communications.

Amanda frequently counsels clients on health and welfare arrangements, including cafeteria plans, health savings accounts, health reimbursement arrangements, flexible spending arrangements, and wellness programs.  Her experience includes advising clients regarding compliance with ERISA, the Internal Revenue Code, HIPAA, COBRA, MHPAEA, ACA, GINA, Medicare, and state individual mandate laws. Amanda’s health and welfare practice also includes negotiating with plan service providers and managing the qualified medical child support order process on behalf of clients. Amanda has also authored articles regarding health and welfare topics, including those published in the Buffalo Law Journal and Law360.

In addition, she has experience counseling public and private, U.S. and international, companies regarding compliance with the federal and state securities laws implicated when granting shares and other awards under equity compensation plans. She has assisted clients in drafting the securities filings required to register or to exempt such shares and awards with the SEC and the U.S. states and advised public companies regarding SEC disclosure of director and executive compensation and employee benefit arrangements in their annual proxy statements. With a diverse background as a securities and an employee benefits and executive compensation attorney, she is able to counsel clients regarding the interplay between the two types of law.

Amanda is a Board member of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Erie, Niagara and the Southern Tier, is the chair of their Young Professionals Board, and a member of their Governance Committee. She is also a member of the Buffalo Niagara Human Resource Association.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Amanda practiced as an associate in the Employee Benefits and Executive Compensation practice group and in the Securities and Capital Markets practice group at a firm located in Buffalo, New York. While in law school, Amanda served as a Judicial Extern in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York, clerking for Judge Leslie Foschio. She was also selected to receive The New York Bar Foundation’s Trusts and Estates Law Section Fellowship and clerked for Judge Barbara Howe in Erie County Surrogate’s Court.

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Photo of Jennifer Rigterink Jennifer Rigterink

Jennifer Rigterink is senior counsel in the Labor Department and a member of the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group.

Jennifer focuses on a diverse array of tax and ERISA issues impacting employee benefits.  Her wide-ranging practice encompasses qualified retirement plans and non-qualified…

Jennifer Rigterink is senior counsel in the Labor Department and a member of the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group.

Jennifer focuses on a diverse array of tax and ERISA issues impacting employee benefits.  Her wide-ranging practice encompasses qualified retirement plans and non-qualified arrangements, health and welfare benefits, and fringe benefit programs.  She counsels single-employer and multiemployer clients on matters pertaining to plan administration, design and qualification, as well as regulatory, legislative and legal compliance.

In recent years, Jennifer has advised employers and plan sponsors with fiduciary and governance matters applicable to defined benefit plans and pension de-risking activities, including lump sum window programs, annuity purchases, and pension plan terminations.

Jennifer frequently counsels clients on health and welfare arrangements, with a particular focus on all matters relating to family building and reproductive health care benefits.  Her experience also includes working with employers and plan sponsors on mental health parity compliance issues.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Jennifer clerked for Judge Jacques L. Wiener, Jr., in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and Judge Yvette Kane in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.

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  • Posted in:
    Health Care and Life Sciences
  • Blog:
    Compensation & Benefits Blog
  • Organization:
    Proskauer Rose LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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