Originally Posted By: gathermewool
Being young and healthy I opted for the high-deductible plan w/ HSA a few years ago. Fortunately/unfortunately, I ended up in the hospital for a week after emergency surgery. I say fortunately, because unlike a med savings account, the money builds up as you contribute, so when I went to the ER in late August, I had already built up enough to nearly cover my deductible.
Thinking I might have more complications I switched back to the low-deductible plan, but didn't end up going to the Dr. more than a couple of times for routine stuff.
Last year and this year I'm back on the high-deductible plan. I saved >$2k last year, and have maxed out for this year. If I don't withdraw more than what routine visits require, then my plan is to drop off my contributions to as low as possible.
I may reconsider, and treat this as a quasi-401k. The ROI is terrible if left in the account with a low balance, but there is a limit (I need to look this up, but I think it's $2k,) where they allow you to invest in certain funds vice their standard savings-account interest rate.
Overall, I think it's a decent plan if you don't have tons of expensive medical requirements. Even if something bad happens, the worst you'll be responsible for is the deductible, which shouldn't bankrupt most people if you have any kind of savings. if you have no savings, the choice of a low-deductible plan, and the high-deductible is multi-thousands of dollars, then I'd recommend against this, but it makes sense for many of use youngin's who are relatively healthy.
I wish that was an option for me. It's not...I'm stuck getting reamed for a very expensive health plan, with 90% of the benefits being things I will never even dream of using. I want a high-deductible plan! Basically, all I want is catastrophic-event coverage. I don't need coverage for fertility treatments, Viagra, and massage therapy!
Being young and healthy I opted for the high-deductible plan w/ HSA a few years ago. Fortunately/unfortunately, I ended up in the hospital for a week after emergency surgery. I say fortunately, because unlike a med savings account, the money builds up as you contribute, so when I went to the ER in late August, I had already built up enough to nearly cover my deductible.
Thinking I might have more complications I switched back to the low-deductible plan, but didn't end up going to the Dr. more than a couple of times for routine stuff.
Last year and this year I'm back on the high-deductible plan. I saved >$2k last year, and have maxed out for this year. If I don't withdraw more than what routine visits require, then my plan is to drop off my contributions to as low as possible.
I may reconsider, and treat this as a quasi-401k. The ROI is terrible if left in the account with a low balance, but there is a limit (I need to look this up, but I think it's $2k,) where they allow you to invest in certain funds vice their standard savings-account interest rate.
Overall, I think it's a decent plan if you don't have tons of expensive medical requirements. Even if something bad happens, the worst you'll be responsible for is the deductible, which shouldn't bankrupt most people if you have any kind of savings. if you have no savings, the choice of a low-deductible plan, and the high-deductible is multi-thousands of dollars, then I'd recommend against this, but it makes sense for many of use youngin's who are relatively healthy.
I wish that was an option for me. It's not...I'm stuck getting reamed for a very expensive health plan, with 90% of the benefits being things I will never even dream of using. I want a high-deductible plan! Basically, all I want is catastrophic-event coverage. I don't need coverage for fertility treatments, Viagra, and massage therapy!