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HSA and FSA Tax Strategy

Limited-Purpose FSA and HSA:
Stacking the Triple Tax Advantage on Dental and Vision

20-Minute Read Updated June 2026 For HR Directors, Financial Advisors, and HDHP Enrollees

A standard health FSA eliminates HSA eligibility entirely for the plan year it covers. A limited-purpose FSA covers only dental and vision expenses, preserving HSA eligibility and allowing employees to stack $3,300 in LP-FSA elections alongside $8,550 in family HSA contributions for a combined $11,850 in pre-tax savings capacity. The stacked strategy generates $1,555 more in annual tax savings for a $95,000 earner in the 22% bracket, and substantially more for high-income earners in the 32% and 37% brackets. This guide delivers the complete implementation framework for employers and the tax optimization playbook for individuals on high-deductible health plans.

Limited-Purpose FSA HSA 2026 HDHP Strategy Triple Tax Advantage Dental and Vision FSA
$11,850
Combined Max (Family 2026)
$3,300
LP-FSA Limit 2026
$8,550
HSA Family Limit 2026
$1,555
Extra Tax Savings vs FSA-Only
3x
HSA Tax Advantage Layers

What Is a Limited-Purpose FSA?

A limited-purpose FSA is a flexible spending account available under a Section 125 cafeteria plan that restricts eligible reimbursements to dental and vision expenses only. The restriction is not a limitation in the pejorative sense. It is a deliberate design that preserves the account holder’s eligibility to simultaneously contribute to and receive contributions from a health savings account, which a standard health FSA would otherwise disqualify.

The practical value of this compatibility is substantial. Employees enrolled in a qualifying high-deductible health plan who elect an LP-FSA and an HSA in the same plan year can access two separate pre-tax savings vehicles simultaneously, covering dental and vision costs from the LP-FSA while funding HSA contributions for current and future medical expenses. The combined annual contribution capacity in 2026 reaches $11,850 for an employee with family HDHP coverage, more than three times what a standard health FSA alone provides.

For HR directors designing benefits packages around HDHP adoption and for financial advisors counseling high-income clients on tax minimization, the LP-FSA plus HSA combination represents one of the highest-impact, lowest-complexity tax strategies available within the employer-sponsored benefits ecosystem.

Why the LP-FSA Preserves HSA Eligibility

The IRS disqualifies HSA eligibility for any individual covered by a health plan that is not a qualifying high-deductible health plan. A standard health FSA qualifies as such a disqualifying plan because it provides first-dollar coverage for general medical expenses before the HDHP deductible is met, effectively violating the HDHP’s required deductible structure.

The LP-FSA escapes this disqualification because it covers only dental and vision, which are not general medical costs under IRS definitions. Dental and vision expenses are not required to be subject to the HDHP deductible, and coverage of these expenses through an LP-FSA does not impair the integrity of the HDHP’s minimum deductible requirements. As a result, an LP-FSA is classified as a permitted insurance arrangement that does not disqualify HSA eligibility under IRS Notice 2004-50 and subsequent guidance.

Key IRS Rule to Know

A standard health FSA covering general medical expenses disqualifies HSA eligibility for the entire plan year in which it is active, including any period before the FSA covers an expense. An employee who holds a standard health FSA cannot make or receive HSA contributions for that year, even if the FSA balance is zero. Switching to an LP-FSA eliminates this disqualification entirely.

The HSA Compatibility Test

Before an employer can offer an LP-FSA as an HSA-compatible benefit, the plan document must explicitly define the LP-FSA as a limited-purpose account covering only dental and vision. A plan document that defines the account as a general health FSA with a note restricting usage does not satisfy the IRS requirement. The account type must be established in the plan document itself, and the third-party administrator must configure the debit card or claims processing system to reject non-dental, non-vision submissions.

The Stacking Tax Savings Math

The tax savings comparison between a standard health FSA approach and an LP-FSA plus HSA stack becomes clearest when modeled against a realistic employee profile. Consider an employee earning $95,000 annually, filing jointly, with family HDHP coverage through their employer. Their federal marginal income tax rate is 22%, and they have $2,200 in annual dental and vision expenses alongside $4,500 in annual general medical expenses.

Tax Savings Comparison: Standard FSA vs. LP-FSA Plus HSA Stack (2026, Family HDHP, $95,000 Income)

Option A: Standard Health FSA Only

Health FSA election$3,300
Federal income tax saved (22%)$726
FICA saved (7.65%)$252
HSA contribution (disqualified)$0
Total annual tax savings$978

Option B: LP-FSA Plus HSA Stack

LP-FSA election (dental and vision)$2,200
HSA family contribution$8,550
Total pre-tax elections$10,750
Federal income tax saved (22%)$2,365
FICA saved on LP-FSA (7.65%)$168
Total annual tax savings$2,533
Additional annual tax savings from stacked approach$1,555 more
HSA investment growth on $8,550 at 6% annually (10 years)$112,400 tax-free

The stacked approach generates $1,555 more in annual tax savings for this employee. Over 10 years of consistent HSA contributions growing at 6% annually, the HSA accumulates approximately $112,400 in tax-free assets available for any qualified medical expense in retirement, when healthcare costs typically peak. The LP-FSA has covered dental and vision costs throughout that period without touching HSA funds, allowing the full HSA balance to compound uninterrupted.

What Qualifies Under an LP-FSA

The restricted scope of the LP-FSA does not limit its practical utility for most employees. Dental and vision costs represent some of the most predictable, recurring annual healthcare expenses the average American family incurs. Routine dental cleanings at $150 to $250 per visit, annual vision exams at $100 to $175, prescription eyeglass frames and lenses at $300 to $800, and orthodontia ranging from $4,000 to $8,000 per treatment course all qualify as LP-FSA eligible.

LP-FSA EligibleEstimated Annual CostNotes
Dental cleanings and exams$300 to $600 per familyTypically twice yearly per person
Dental X-rays$75 to $200Bitewing and panoramic
Fillings and crowns$200 to $1,500 per procedureAfter insurance
Orthodontia$4,000 to $8,000 per courseCan use monthly from LP-FSA while in treatment
Eye exams$100 to $175 per personAnnual or biannual
Prescription eyeglasses$200 to $800 per pairFrames and lenses together
Contact lenses and solutions$250 to $600 annuallyPrescription lenses and associated supplies
LASIK surgery$3,000 to $5,000Major LP-FSA eligible use case for one-time election

What the LP-FSA Does Not Cover

The LP-FSA does not cover prescription drugs, over-the-counter medications, medical deductibles, copayments, or general practitioner visits. These expenses fall under the HSA’s broader qualified medical expense definition. Employees who conflate the two accounts may inadvertently submit ineligible claims to the LP-FSA, which the plan administrator must reject. Rejected claims create administrative friction and may leave employees confused about which account covers which type of expense. Clear communication during open enrollment prevents this confusion and improves both accounts’ utilization rates.

Model Your LP-FSA and HSA Tax Savings

Use our insurance calculators to compare the after-tax cost of dental and vision expenses under an LP-FSA versus out-of-pocket, and see exactly how much more the stacked approach saves for your income and coverage level.

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Employer Design Considerations for LP-FSA Programs

Employers considering adding an LP-FSA to an existing HDHP and HSA benefits package must address the plan document, the TPA configuration, and the employee communications process. The LP-FSA must be established as a separate account type in the Section 125 plan document, clearly distinguished from any standard health FSA offered to non-HDHP employees. TPAs generally support LP-FSA account types within their standard platform, and the setup cost is typically included in the existing Section 125 administration fee.

The employer’s FICA savings on LP-FSA elections are calculated identically to standard health FSA savings. Each dollar an employee elects to the LP-FSA through payroll under the Section 125 plan reduces the FICA base by one dollar, generating $0.0765 in employer FICA savings per dollar of election. A 40-employee subset of an HDHP population each electing $1,200 annually to an LP-FSA generates $3,672 in annual employer FICA savings with zero additional benefit cost.

Carryover and Grace Period Options

LP-FSAs are eligible for the same carryover and grace period provisions available to standard health FSAs. An employer may offer a carryover of up to $660 in unused LP-FSA funds to the following plan year, or a grace period of up to 2.5 months during which prior-year funds remain available. Importantly, an LP-FSA with a carryover provision remains HSA-compatible as long as the carryover amount is only available for dental and vision expenses. An LP-FSA with a grace period is not HSA-compatible during the grace period because the grace period effectively extends the prior year’s coverage into the new plan year, creating a period where the employee is covered by both the LP-FSA grace period and potentially a new HSA-eligible HDHP. Employers designing LP-FSA programs for HDHP populations should offer the carryover provision rather than the grace period to preserve HSA compatibility throughout the year.

LP-FSA Plus HSA Strategy for High-Income Earners

The tax benefit of the LP-FSA plus HSA stack scales with marginal income tax rate. An employee in the 32% federal bracket gains substantially more from the same contribution amounts than an employee in the 22% bracket. At $8,550 in HSA contributions plus $2,200 in LP-FSA elections, the 32% bracket employee generates $3,440 in federal income tax savings, compared to $2,365 for the 22% bracket employee. State income tax savings at rates from 4% to 9.9% add a further $477 to $1,067 depending on the state, making this strategy particularly compelling in high-income-tax states such as California, New York, New Jersey, and Minnesota.

Financial advisors counseling high-income HDHP participants should also communicate the HSA’s retirement account potential. After age 65, HSA funds may be withdrawn for any purpose without penalty, with only ordinary income tax applying on non-medical distributions, identical to a traditional IRA distribution. An HSA funded throughout a career and invested in a diversified equity portfolio represents a tax-advantaged retirement asset that exceeds the 401(k) in total tax efficiency because qualified medical withdrawals remain completely tax-free. The LP-FSA is the mechanism that allows the HSA to be funded at maximum annual levels without using HSA dollars for dental and vision, preserving the HSA for higher-value uses.

Investment Strategy for Long-Term HSA Accumulation

HSA accountholders who pair their account with an LP-FSA for current dental and vision expenses are best positioned to invest their HSA balances in long-term growth assets rather than holding cash for near-term medical expenses. The LP-FSA handles predictable recurring dental and vision costs from current pre-tax salary, allowing the HSA to compound uninterrupted. Most major HSA custodians allow investment in mutual funds, index funds, and ETFs once the cash balance exceeds a minimum threshold, typically $500 to $1,000. Over a 25-year career, an employee contributing $8,550 annually to an HSA invested in a low-cost total market index fund generating 7% annual returns accumulates approximately $584,000 in tax-free healthcare and retirement assets. The IRS Publication 969 on HSAs and medical savings accounts provides the complete regulatory framework governing HSA investments and qualified distributions.

Implementing LP-FSA Alongside HDHP and HSA

The implementation process for an LP-FSA follows the same sequence as a standard health FSA implementation under Section 125, with two critical additional steps. First, the plan document must explicitly designate the new account as a limited-purpose FSA and define the dental and vision restriction. Second, the TPA must configure the LP-FSA claims processing or debit card system to block non-dental, non-vision submissions at the point of service or claim review. Failing to implement this technical restriction creates compliance exposure if general medical claims are processed through an LP-FSA, which would retroactively convert the account to a general health FSA and disqualify HSA eligibility for all affected employees.

Open enrollment communications for LP-FSA programs must clearly explain which expenses are eligible under each account type. Employees who have previously participated in a standard health FSA must understand that the LP-FSA accepts only dental and vision submissions and that general medical expenses must be paid from the HSA or out-of-pocket until the HDHP deductible is met. A side-by-side one-page summary comparing LP-FSA and HSA eligible expenses distributed during enrollment significantly reduces post-enrollment confusion and claims rejection rates.

Annual Review and Compliance Monitoring

Employers offering LP-FSA programs alongside HSA-qualified HDHPs should conduct an annual compliance review confirming that the plan document correctly designates the LP-FSA scope, the TPA is correctly blocking ineligible claims, and the carryover provision is configured correctly to avoid disrupting HSA eligibility during the carryover period. The Department of Labor’s guidance on account-based health plans provides supplemental compliance context for employers operating integrated HDHP and FSA benefit structures. Review the prior year’s claims data to confirm no ineligible medical claims were processed through the LP-FSA accounts, which is the primary operational compliance risk in LP-FSA programs. Documenting this annual review creates an audit trail demonstrating the employer’s commitment to maintaining the HSA-compatible LP-FSA design.

Communicating the Stacked Strategy to Employees

Many employees enrolled in HDHP coverage are unaware that an LP-FSA exists or that they can hold both an LP-FSA and an HSA simultaneously. Benefits communications that lead with the combined annual tax savings figure, presented as a specific dollar amount calculated for the employee’s income level and coverage tier, generate significantly higher LP-FSA enrollment rates than generic descriptions of plan features. For an employee earning $95,000 with family HDHP coverage, the communication should state plainly that electing a $2,200 LP-FSA alongside the maximum HSA contribution saves approximately $2,533 in combined federal taxes this year, compared to $978 under a standard FSA, and that the remaining $8,550 in the HSA continues growing tax-free for future medical costs. Personalized tax savings estimates, delivered during enrollment, are the most effective single driver of LP-FSA and HSA participation rates in employer benefit programs.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a limited-purpose FSA? +
A limited-purpose FSA is a flexible spending account that restricts eligible reimbursements to dental and vision expenses only. Unlike a standard health FSA, the LP-FSA’s restricted scope makes it compatible with a health savings account. Employees on high-deductible health plans can hold both an LP-FSA and an HSA simultaneously, accessing pre-tax savings on dental and vision costs while maintaining full HSA contribution eligibility and the HSA’s triple tax advantage.
Why can you have both an LP-FSA and an HSA at the same time? +
A standard health FSA disqualifies HSA eligibility because it provides first-dollar medical coverage that violates the HDHP’s required deductible structure. An LP-FSA covers only dental and vision, which are not general medical costs and do not impair the HDHP’s deductible requirements. As a result, the LP-FSA is classified as a permitted insurance arrangement that does not trigger HSA disqualification under IRS Notice 2004-50 and subsequent guidance.
What are the 2026 contribution limits for an LP-FSA and HSA combined? +
For 2026, the LP-FSA contribution limit is $3,300 per employee. The HSA contribution limit is $4,300 for self-only HDHP coverage and $8,550 for family HDHP coverage. An employee with family HDHP coverage can stack a full $3,300 LP-FSA election with the full $8,550 HSA contribution, creating a combined $11,850 in annual pre-tax savings capacity for eligible healthcare, dental, and vision expenses.
What expenses can be paid from a limited-purpose FSA? +
LP-FSA eligible expenses are limited to dental and vision care. Dental qualifying expenses include cleanings, exams, X-rays, fillings, crowns, root canals, orthodontia, dentures, and periodontal treatment. Vision qualifying expenses include eye exams, prescription eyeglasses, contact lenses and solutions, and LASIK surgery. General medical expenses, prescription drugs, and over-the-counter medications are not eligible under an LP-FSA and must be paid from the HSA or out of pocket.
How much more tax savings does LP-FSA plus HSA stacking generate versus FSA-only? +
For an employee in the 22% federal bracket earning $95,000 with family HDHP coverage, the LP-FSA plus HSA stack generates approximately $1,555 more in annual tax savings than a standard FSA. In the 32% bracket, the additional savings reach approximately $2,000 or more annually. Over 10 years, the HSA’s tax-free investment growth on the maximum annual contribution adds thousands more in compounded benefit unavailable from the standard FSA approach.
Does an LP-FSA have a use-it-or-lose-it rule like a standard FSA? +
Yes. The LP-FSA is subject to the same use-it-or-lose-it rules as a standard health FSA. Funds remaining at the end of the plan year are forfeited unless the employer offers a carryover provision of up to $660. Employers should offer the carryover rather than a grace period for LP-FSA accounts held alongside HSAs, because an LP-FSA grace period can disrupt HSA eligibility during the overlap period, while a carryover provision preserves HSA compatibility year-round.
Can an LP-FSA be converted to a standard FSA mid-year? +
Under limited circumstances, an LP-FSA may expand to cover general medical expenses if the employee loses HDHP coverage due to a qualifying life event. However, the employee simultaneously loses HSA eligibility from the date HDHP coverage ends. The conversion should be evaluated carefully against the employee’s HSA balance, remaining contribution capacity for the year, and the expected cost of the non-HDHP coverage period before a mid-year change is processed.
How does the HSA triple tax advantage compare to an LP-FSA? +
The HSA provides three tax benefits: pre-tax or deductible contributions, tax-free growth on invested balances, and tax-free qualified withdrawals. The LP-FSA provides only the first benefit, the pre-tax contribution exclusion, with no investment capability and no carryforward absent an employer carryover provision. The LP-FSA and HSA are complementary accounts, not competing ones. The LP-FSA handles dental and vision while the HSA accumulates tax-free wealth for all other medical costs, including retirement healthcare expenses.
How do employers benefit from offering LP-FSAs alongside HDHPs? +
Employers offering LP-FSAs alongside HDHP and HSA programs generate FICA savings on LP-FSA elections through the Section 125 plan framework, exactly as with standard health FSA elections. A 40-employee HDHP population each electing $1,200 to an LP-FSA generates $3,672 in annual employer FICA savings at zero additional cost. Combined with FICA savings from employer HSA contributions, the total payroll tax benefit of a full HDHP benefits stack frequently exceeds $15,000 annually for a 50-employee company.

Ready to Stack LP-FSA and HSA Benefits for Your Team?

Explore our complete FSA and HSA guide series to build a benefits architecture that maximizes tax savings for both employer and employee across dental, vision, and medical expense categories.

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