An HSA is a portable, investable account you own, but it requires a high-deductible health plan (HDHP). An FSA is simpler and needs no special health plan, but your employer owns it and the money is largely use-it-or-lose-it. The answer to which is better isn’t universal — it depends on your coverage and your goals. Here’s how they compare.
HSA vs. FSA: a quick comparison
HSA
FSA
Who can open one
Anyone with an HSA-eligible HDHP
Only if your employer offers one
Requires an HDHP
Yes
No
2026 contribution limit
$4,400 self-only / $8,750 family
$3,400 (health FSA)
Owned by
You
Your employer
Rolls over year to year
Yes, in full
No — up to $680 carryover or a grace period, if your employer offers it
Portable if you change jobs
Yes
No, generally forfeited
Can you invest it
Yes
No
Tax treatment
Triple tax-advantaged
Pretax contributions
Change contributions mid-year
Yes, anytime
Only with a qualifying life event
HSA limits come from IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-19 and FSA limits from Revenue Procedure 2025-32.(1),(2)
How they’re similar
Both accounts let you pay for qualified medical expenses with pretax dollars, which lowers your taxable income. Both are capped by annual IRS limits, and both can be funded through payroll deductions at work. For everyday costs like copays, prescriptions and dental or vision care, either one does the job.
How they’re different
Ownership and portability. An HSA is yours for life and moves with you between jobs. An FSA belongs to your employer, and you generally forfeit the balance when you leave.
Rollover and investing. HSA funds roll over in full every year and can be invested to grow. FSA funds are largely use-it-or-lose-it and can’t be invested.
Eligibility. An HSA requires an HSA-eligible HDHP. An FSA has no health-plan requirement, but it’s only available if your employer offers one.
Can you have both an HSA and an FSA?
This is where people most often get tripped up. You can’t contribute to an HSA while you — or your spouse — are covered by a general-purpose FSA, because the IRS treats it as disqualifying coverage.(3)
There are compatible exceptions, though. A limited-purpose FSA, which covers only dental and vision, can be paired with an HSA, as can a post-deductible FSA that only reimburses expenses after you’ve met your deductible.(3) A dependent care FSA is always fine alongside an HSA because it isn’t medical coverage.
Which is better for you?
There’s no single winner — it depends on your health plan and how you want to use the money.
Choose an HSA if:
You have or can enroll in a high-deductible health plan
You want to invest the balance and build long-term or retirement savings
You want money that’s yours to keep for life
You’re self-employed and want a tax-advantaged health account
Choose an FSA if:
You don’t have a high-deductible health plan
Your employer offers an FSA, especially with matching funds or flex credits
You have predictable annual medical or dependent care costs
You need a dependent care FSA to offset childcare expenses
If you have an HDHP but still want to cover dental and vision from a separate pot, you don’t have to choose — an HSA paired with a limited-purpose FSA can do both.
Bottom line
An HSA offers more flexibility, portability and long-term growth, but it requires a high-deductible health plan. An FSA is simpler and open to more people, but it’s tied to your employer and mostly use-it-or-lose-it. This isn’t tax advice, so check your specific situation with a tax professional.
Frequently asked questions
Neither is universally better. An HSA is more flexible, portable and can be invested, but it requires a high-deductible health plan. An FSA is simpler and available without an HDHP, but it's owned by your employer and largely use-it-or-lose-it.
Not with a general-purpose FSA, which blocks HSA contributions. But a limited-purpose FSA for dental and vision, a post-deductible FSA or a dependent care FSA can all be paired with an HSA.
An HSA follows you — it's yours for life. An FSA belongs to your employer, so you generally forfeit any remaining balance when you leave.
Sources
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Finder is not an advisor or brokerage service. Information on this page is for educational purposes only and not a recommendation to invest with any one company, trade specific stocks or fund specific investments. All editorial opinions are our own.
Matt Miczulski is an investments editor and market analyst at Finder. With over 450 bylines, Matt dissects and reviews brokers and investing platforms to expose perks and pain points, explores investment products and concepts and covers market news, making investing more accessible and helping readers to make informed financial decisions.
Before joining Finder in 2021, Matt covered everything from finance news and banking to debt and travel for FinanceBuzz. His expertise and analysis on investing and other financial topics has been featured on Yahoo Finance, CBS, MSN, Best Company and Consolidated Credit, among others. Matt holds a BA in history from William Paterson University.
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