Pay COBRA with Your HSA:
The Early Retirement
Healthcare Bridge Strategy
You spent a decade enrolling in HDHPs, maxing your HSA, and investing every dollar in index funds. Your HSA is now $80,000 to $140,000. You retire at 52. For 18 months, you have the right to pay COBRA premiums with those HSA funds — completely tax-free, under a specific IRC exception that most financial advisors and FIRE bloggers never mention. Those 18 months are not just health coverage. They are the income restructuring window that positions your portfolio withdrawals below the ACA subsidy tipping point for the next 13 years until Medicare. This post is the complete engineering blueprint.
1. The IRC Exception That Makes This Work: Why COBRA Premiums Are Qualified HSA Expenses
The legal foundation of the HSA-funded COBRA bridge strategy is a specific exception in the Internal Revenue Code that most financial advisors — and the vast majority of FIRE community resources — have never systematically applied to early retirement healthcare planning. Understanding the exact scope of this exception, its limitations, and the conditions under which it applies is the first step in building a bridge strategy that is legally sound, administratively executable, and tax-optimized for the specific facts of each early retiree’s situation.
Taxable Portfolio Withdrawal to Pay COBRA:
Amount needed from portfolio to pay $2,000/month COBRA: $2,000/month
But if withdrawal triggers capital gains: $2,000 gain × 15% LTCG rate = $300/month tax
Or if from traditional IRA: $2,000 × 22% marginal rate = $440/month tax — AND increases MAGI
Total cost to generate $2,000 after-tax for COBRA: $2,353 to $2,667/month gross portfolio draw
HSA Distribution to Pay COBRA (IRC §223(d)(2)(B)):
HSA distribution: $2,000/month
Federal income tax: $0 — qualified medical expense exclusion
State income tax: $0 — most states conform to federal HSA treatment
20% penalty tax: $0 — exception applies to COBRA premiums
MAGI impact: $0 — HSA qualified distributions do not enter AGI
Total cost: $2,000/month — exactly the COBRA premium. No tax friction. No MAGI impact.
HSA efficiency advantage over taxable portfolio: $353 to $667/month = $4,236 to $8,004/year over 18 months
2. The Three-Phase FIRE Healthcare Bridge: Architecture from Age 50 to 65
The complete FIRE healthcare strategy from early retirement to Medicare eligibility has three distinct phases, each with a different primary coverage mechanism, income management objective, and HSA deployment role. The three phases are sequential — each phase creates the conditions that make the next phase financially optimal. Understanding the architecture as a whole is essential before optimizing any individual phase, because decisions made in Phase 1 have compounding consequences across all 15 years to Medicare.
3. Building the HSA Bridge Capital: How Much You Need and How to Accumulate It
The HSA-funded COBRA bridge strategy requires sufficient accumulated HSA capital to cover 18 months of COBRA premiums — a specific dollar amount that depends on the retiree’s coverage tier and employer plan cost. FIRE practitioners who built their HSA systematically during their working years — enrolling in HDHPs, maximizing annual contributions, and investing all HSA funds in low-cost index funds rather than holding them in the default cash position — will have accumulated substantially more than the minimum required. Understanding the accumulation mechanics, the investment growth potential, and the strategic decisions that maximize the HSA bridge capital available at retirement is essential for FIRE practitioners who are still in the accumulation phase.
Calculate Your HSA Bridge Capital and COBRA Coverage Duration
Enter your current HSA balance, expected annual investment return, and COBRA premium. The COBRA Health Insurance Cost Calculator shows how many months your HSA can fund COBRA tax-free — and your projected remaining balance for Phase 2 qualified medical expenses.
4. The 18-Month Income Restructuring Window: What to Do While COBRA Runs
The 18-month COBRA bridge funded by HSA capital is not primarily a healthcare decision — it is a 18-month window during which the early retiree’s income is at its most flexible, their tax situation is at its most controllable, and the actions taken have the greatest compounding impact on lifetime healthcare costs and total tax burden. The absence of employment income, the absence of COBRA premium MAGI impact, and the availability of the full federal tax brackets for strategic income recognition creates a unique planning window that does not recur once ACA coverage begins. The income management decisions during this window determine the household’s ACA subsidy eligibility for the following decade.
Age 52 FIRE Retiree, Couple Filing Jointly, $3.2M Portfolio: Taxable $800K, Traditional IRA $1.8M, Roth $600K, HSA $120K
5. The Roth Conversion Ladder During the COBRA Bridge: Year-by-Year Model
The Roth conversion ladder is the primary income restructuring tool during the 18-month COBRA bridge. It serves two simultaneous purposes: reducing the traditional IRA balance that will generate future RMDs pushing MAGI above the ACA subsidy threshold, and building Roth IRA capital that can be distributed tax-free and MAGI-free during the Phase 2 ACA subsidy period. The five-year aging rule for Roth conversions — which requires that converted funds remain in the Roth IRA for five years before penalty-free withdrawal before age 59½ — means that the conversions made during the COBRA bridge will become accessible for penalty-free withdrawal right around age 57 to 58 for a retiree who retires at age 52, creating a five-year access gap that must be bridged by other sources.
Age 52
$2,100/mo from HSA. No MAGI.
Age 53
Months 13-18: $12,600 from HSA. COBRA expires Month 18.
Age 54
Subsidy active. Net premium: ~$200/mo from Roth distribution.
Age 55-56
Subsidy sustained. Annual re-enrollment optimization.
Age 57-61
Continued subsidy. Year 1 Roth conversion now accessible.
Age 62-64
Final ACA years. Medicare begins at 65.
6. The Founder and Sabbatical-Taker Variation: When the Separation Is Not a Final Retirement
The HSA-funded COBRA bridge is not exclusively a permanent retirement strategy. Founders who sell their company and take a two-to-five year sabbatical before their next venture, executives who take a planned career break, and professionals who leave employment to spend time with family or pursue a non-income-generating project all face the same 18-month COBRA window and the same income restructuring opportunity — even if they fully intend to return to high-income work. For the sabbatical-taker, the strategic calculus differs from the FIRE practitioner in one critical dimension: the income restructuring window may be shorter and the Roth conversion opportunity more limited if the sabbatical earns consulting or board income that occupies the available tax brackets.
Age 47 Founder, Sold Company for $8M After-Tax Proceeds in January. Planning 24-Month Sabbatical Before Next Venture. Portfolio: $8M Liquid (Taxable), $400K Traditional IRA, $150K Roth, $95K HSA.
7. The Administrative Mechanics: How to Actually Pay COBRA from an HSA
The legal and strategic case for HSA-funded COBRA is clear. The administrative execution — the specific steps required to set up, process, and document HSA distributions for COBRA premium payments — is less commonly explained, and the documentation requirements are critical for maintaining the tax-free status of the distributions. IRS audits of HSA distributions for COBRA premiums are not uncommon, particularly for large distributions, and the retiree must be prepared to substantiate the qualified status of each distribution with contemporaneous documentation.
| Step | Action Required | Documentation to Retain | Common Errors to Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Elect COBRA | Complete COBRA election within 60 days of qualifying event. Confirm the specific COBRA plan details: carrier, plan type, monthly premium, payment address, and coverage effective date. | COBRA election notice and completed election form. Confirmation of enrollment from COBRA administrator. | Do not assume HSA will reimburse — confirm your specific COBRA plan qualifies under §223(d)(2)(B) with your HSA custodian before electing |
| 2. Establish HSA Distribution Method | Contact your HSA administrator (Fidelity, Lively, HealthEquity, HSA Bank, etc.) and establish the distribution method: direct payment to COBRA administrator, debit card, or reimbursement after out-of-pocket payment. Most administrators support either direct distribution or reimbursement. | HSA administrator confirmation of distribution setup. Record the distribution method selected. | Some HSA custodians require a paper reimbursement request rather than direct COBRA payment — confirm the specific process before the first payment due date to avoid missing the payment and losing COBRA coverage |
| 3. Set Monthly Distribution Cadence | Set up recurring monthly HSA distributions equal to the exact COBRA premium amount. If the COBRA premium changes (rare but possible if the employer’s plan renews mid-year), update the distribution amount immediately. | Recurring distribution authorization from HSA administrator. Monthly distribution confirmations. | Do not distribute more than the exact COBRA premium amount in any month — excess distributions over the qualified expense are taxable income plus the 20% penalty for account holders under 65 |
| 4. Retain COBRA Premium Invoices | Retain every COBRA premium invoice or payment coupon issued by the COBRA administrator. These are the primary substantiation documents linking the HSA distribution to the qualified expense. | Monthly COBRA premium invoices or coupon books. COBRA administrator payment confirmations or cancelled check equivalents. | Many COBRA administrators use a coupon book system with no monthly invoice — retain the coupon stubs or request itemized payment confirmations to document each month’s premium payment |
| 5. Complete IRS Form 8889 at Tax Filing | Report all HSA distributions on IRS Form 8889 (Part II). The COBRA premium distributions are reported as qualified medical expense distributions — they reduce the taxable distribution amount. The HSA administrator will issue Form 1099-SA showing total distributions; Form 8889 reconciles the qualified vs. non-qualified portion. | Form 1099-SA from HSA custodian. Copies of COBRA premium invoices for the full year. Completed Form 8889 with supporting calculations. | IRS Form 1099-SA reports total distributions including qualified amounts — the IRS will issue a CP2000 notice if the distribution appears on 1099-SA without a corresponding Form 8889 filed showing the qualified expense. Always file Form 8889. |
| 6. Maintain a Qualified Expense Log | Maintain a running expense log documenting each HSA distribution: date, amount, payee (COBRA administrator name), and expense type (COBRA continuation coverage premium — IRC §223(d)(2)(B)). This log, combined with the invoices, is the audit package if the IRS questions the distribution. | Chronological expense log with dates, amounts, payees, and expense categories. Retain for minimum 7 years after the tax year of the distribution (general IRS document retention recommendation for tax records). | A generic “medical expense” label in the expense log is insufficient — specifically reference “COBRA continuation coverage premium” and the IRC section in the log entry to demonstrate awareness of the specific exception being applied |
| 7. Handle the COBRA Expiration Month | In month 18, the final COBRA premium is paid. Confirm the exact coverage end date and the effective start date of the replacement ACA marketplace plan to ensure no coverage gap. The ACA marketplace enrollment should be initiated no later than month 17 of COBRA to ensure the replacement plan is active on the day after COBRA coverage ends. | Final COBRA premium invoice and payment confirmation. ACA marketplace plan confirmation letter showing effective date of new coverage. | COBRA coverage ends on the last day of the month for which the final premium was paid — not on a specific date. ACA marketplace coverage begins on the first of the month after enrollment. A 1-day gap may exist — confirm the specific dates for your situation to avoid any uncovered period. |
8. The ACA Transition Execution: Month 17 to Month 20 of the Bridge
The transition from COBRA to ACA marketplace coverage at the end of the 18-month bridge period is the most operationally sensitive moment in the entire three-phase strategy. Executing it correctly — with no coverage gap, optimal plan selection based on the restructured income projection, and correct advance credit application — determines whether the Phase 2 ACA subsidy years begin at full optimization or with a suboptimal plan choice that persists for the full plan year. The transition window is not a single moment; it is a four-month planning sequence that begins at month 15 of COBRA coverage.
| Month | Action | Key Decision | Consequence If Missed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Month 15 | Run preliminary Year 2 income projection. Estimate Roth conversion total for the year, dividend income, and any other MAGI sources. Calculate preliminary ACA subsidy estimate using Healthcare.gov or a licensed broker. | Which ACA metal tier produces the best net cost at the projected Year 2 MAGI level? Gold for healthy families at 250%-400% FPL, Silver + CSR for families at 100%-250% FPL, Bronze HDHP for HSA continuation. | Starting the analysis too late — month 17 or 18 — creates time pressure that forces a suboptimal plan choice rather than the optimal plan based on a careful network and cost comparison. |
| Month 16 | Run full marketplace plan comparison using broker or Healthcare.gov. Verify provider network includes priority physicians and any specialists needed. Check formulary for ongoing prescriptions. Confirm the benchmark Silver plan premium in your county and the resulting tax credit amount at your projected MAGI. | Is the ACA Gold plan in your market cheaper than the benchmark Silver plan after applying the tax credit to the Gold plan? (Often yes — a common optimization: apply the Silver-based credit to a Gold plan for lower cost than the Silver plan itself.) | Enrolling in the Silver plan by default without checking whether the credit makes the Gold plan cheaper — a common and costly error that results in paying more for less coverage. |
| Month 17 | Complete ACA marketplace enrollment. Select the plan, set the advance premium tax credit at the projected Year 2 MAGI estimate, and confirm the coverage effective date. ACA marketplace coverage begins the first of the month after enrollment (or same month if enrolled by the 15th). | Set the advance credit at the projected income, not the prior year income. If Year 2 income is uncertain, use a conservative (higher) estimate and collect the reconciliation credit at tax time rather than risk a repayment. | Enrolling after the 15th of Month 17 triggers a Month 19 effective date — creating a one-month gap between COBRA end (Month 18) and ACA start (Month 19). Pay careful attention to enrollment deadlines relative to COBRA expiration date. |
| Month 18 | Final COBRA premium paid from HSA. Confirm COBRA coverage end date (last day of month 18). Confirm ACA plan effective date (first of month 19). Document final COBRA payment for Form 8889. Update HSA distribution to stop recurring COBRA payment. | Is the ACA plan confirmed active for Month 19? Has the insurance card and enrollment confirmation been received? Are any ongoing prescriptions transferred to the new plan’s pharmacy network? | Forgetting to cancel the recurring HSA COBRA distribution after month 18 — resulting in an excess HSA distribution (taxable + 20% penalty) made after COBRA coverage has ended and the qualified expense no longer exists. |
| Month 19 | ACA marketplace plan active. Advance premium tax credit reduces first monthly premium. Update Healthcare.gov with any income changes that occurred during the COBRA transition month. Confirm direct premium payment setup if residual premium after credit applies. | Is the monthly net premium after advance credit what was projected? If the carrier shows a higher net premium than expected, verify the advance credit amount was applied correctly — call the marketplace or broker immediately if there is a discrepancy. | Paying the full unsubsidized premium in Month 19 because the advance credit was not correctly applied at enrollment — results in a refund at tax time but creates an unnecessary cash flow burden in the transition month. |
| Month 20 onward | Phase 2 ACA subsidy period fully operational. Report any material income changes to Healthcare.gov within 30 days. Plan for annual Open Enrollment re-optimization each November. Continue Roth conversion calibration to maintain MAGI within the subsidy-optimal range. | Is the projected annual MAGI still within the original estimate? Actual dividends, realized gains, and IRA distributions should be tracked monthly to ensure no surprise MAGI increase pushes the household above the subsidy tipping point before year-end when a mid-year adjustment can still correct it. | Failing to report a material income increase mid-year — resulting in a large advance credit repayment at tax filing that could have been avoided or reduced by adjusting the advance credit amount mid-year when the income change was first anticipated. |
9. HSA Administrator Selection for FIRE Practitioners: What Matters at Retirement vs. Accumulation
The HSA administrator that is optimal during the accumulation phase — when the primary criteria are investment options, expense ratios, and contribution processing efficiency — may not be optimal during the distribution phase, when the primary criteria shift to ease of qualified expense reimbursement, COBRA payment processing, distribution documentation, and fee structure on a balance that is being drawn down rather than built up. FIRE practitioners who are within five years of their retirement target should evaluate their current HSA custodian against distribution-phase criteria and migrate if necessary before retirement — using the once-per-12-month rollover provision to transfer the balance to the optimal distribution-phase custodian.
| Administrator | Monthly Fee | Investment Options | COBRA Payment Support | Distribution Process | FIRE Practitioner Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fidelity HSA | $0 — no monthly fee, no minimum balance | Full Fidelity fund lineup including FZROX (0% expense ratio), FZILX, all ETFs, individual stocks. No investment minimum. | Reimbursement model: pay COBRA premium from external account, then request HSA reimbursement online. Processing in 1 to 3 business days. Direct COBRA payment not supported. | Online reimbursement request portal. Mobile app distribution request. No documentation required at time of request — retain receipts for IRS substantiation. | Optimal — zero fees, best investment options, straightforward reimbursement. Recommended default for FIRE practitioners. |
| Lively HSA | $0 individual — no monthly fee | TD Ameritrade/Schwab brokerage integration. Full ETF and mutual fund access. No investment minimum above $1. | Reimbursement model similar to Fidelity. Schwab debit card available for direct medical payments including COBRA if administrator accepts card payment. | Clean mobile-first interface. Expense tracking built in. Easy receipt upload for documentation. | Excellent — zero fees, strong investment access, good mobile UX for distribution management. Strong Fidelity alternative. |
| HealthEquity | $0 to $3.95/month depending on employer relationship and balance tier | Vanguard fund lineup available at investment tier. Minimum cash balance required before investing: $1,000 to $2,000. | Debit card and reimbursement model. Some employer plans allow direct COBRA payment — confirm with specific plan administrator. | Full online portal. Expense management tools included. | Good during accumulation with employer plan. Verify fee structure for individual/rollover account at retirement — may add fees after employer relationship ends. |
| HSA Bank | $2.50/month if balance below $3,000; $0 above | TD Ameritrade brokerage integration for investment portion. $1,000 minimum cash before investing. | Debit card and reimbursement model. Standard COBRA premium reimbursement supported. | Online portal with standard distribution request functionality. | Acceptable but not optimal. The $1,000 uninvested cash floor and fee below $3,000 reduce distribution-phase efficiency for a balance being drawn down toward zero over 13 years. |
| Optum Bank (employer-linked) | $2.75 to $3.75/month post-employment — most employer relationships end when HSA holder separates | Limited fund lineup. Minimum $2,000 cash before investing. Fund expense ratios typically higher than Fidelity/Lively alternatives. | Reimbursement model. Standard COBRA premium support. | Portal-based distribution. Less streamlined than Fidelity/Lively for frequent reimbursements. | Migrate before retirement. Monthly fees, limited investment options, and cash minimums reduce effective return on the HSA bridge capital. Use one HSA rollover to move to Fidelity. |
10. The Complete FIRE Healthcare Cost Model: Lifetime Savings vs. the No-Optimization Baseline
The full financial impact of the three-phase HSA + COBRA + ACA bridge strategy is best understood in comparison to the no-optimization baseline — the cost a FIRE practitioner would incur if they simply paid COBRA premiums from taxable accounts at full cost, transitioned to full-premium ACA marketplace coverage after COBRA, and drew down traditional IRA assets at peak marginal rates to fund healthcare spending. The lifetime savings differential between the optimized and baseline approaches, compounded over 13 years from age 52 to 65, represents the true value of the engineering in this post.
Calculate Your HSA Bridge Capital and Early Retirement Healthcare Cost
Enter your current HSA balance, COBRA monthly premium, and projected retirement income. The COBRA Health Insurance Cost Calculator models your 18-month bridge cost, remaining HSA capital, and the ACA subsidy available in Phase 2 — showing the lifetime cost differential between optimized and baseline approaches.
Calculate My FIRE Healthcare Bridge →Frequently Asked Questions
Can you pay COBRA premiums with an HSA?
Yes. Under IRC Section 223(d)(2)(B), HSA distributions used to pay COBRA continuation coverage premiums are explicitly classified as qualified medical expenses. This means the distributions are completely tax-free — no federal income tax, no state income tax in most states, and no 20% penalty — regardless of the account holder’s age. This exception applies specifically to COBRA continuation coverage premiums for a former employee. Importantly, the exception does not require the account holder to be receiving unemployment compensation — the unemployment compensation requirement in IRC §223(d)(2)(B) applies to other health insurance premium exceptions, not to COBRA. A FIRE practitioner who voluntarily retires and does not collect unemployment insurance can still use HSA funds to pay COBRA premiums tax-free under this exception.
How much HSA money do you need to pay 18 months of COBRA?
The HSA capital required depends on the coverage tier and employer plan cost. For a family enrolled in a premium PPO at $2,200 per month in COBRA premiums, 18 months requires $39,600. For a standard PPO family plan at $1,800 per month, 18 months requires $32,400. For an HDHP family plan at $1,200 per month, 18 months requires $21,600. For a single filer at $680 per month, 18 months requires $12,240. FIRE practitioners who maxed the family HSA contribution for 10 years and invested in index funds will typically have $100,000 to $140,000 in accumulated HSA capital — well above the minimum required for the 18-month COBRA bridge — leaving $60,000 to $100,000 in residual HSA capital for Phase 2 qualified medical expenses and Phase 3 Medicare premium payments.
What is the FIRE healthcare bridge strategy?
The FIRE healthcare bridge strategy is a three-phase health insurance sequencing plan for early retirees. Phase 1 uses accumulated HSA capital to pay 18 months of COBRA premiums tax-free while executing income restructuring: Roth conversions at favorable rates, zero-rate capital gain harvesting, and traditional IRA drawdown calibration. Phase 2 transitions to a subsidized ACA Gold or Silver marketplace plan, drawing income primarily from Roth distributions and taxable account basis recovery — both zero-MAGI sources — to maintain household income below the ACA subsidy tipping point. Phase 3 transitions to Medicare at age 65, using remaining HSA capital to pay Medicare Part B, Part D, and Medigap premiums tax-free. The full strategy reduces lifetime healthcare costs by $244,000 to $285,000 compared to a no-optimization baseline for a typical executive family over the 13-year period from age 52 to 65.
Can I contribute to my HSA while on COBRA?
Only if the COBRA plan itself is a qualifying High Deductible Health Plan that meets the IRS minimum deductible and out-of-pocket maximum requirements for HSA eligibility. Most employer group COBRA plans are standard PPO or HMO plans that do not qualify as HDHPs — in that case, HSA contributions cannot be made during the COBRA coverage period. If the COBRA plan is an HDHP, you can continue contributing to your HSA while on COBRA, subject to the annual contribution limits prorated for the months of HDHP coverage. The practical reality for most FIRE practitioners: the employer plan was likely a PPO or HMO during late-career high-earning years (prioritizing low deductibles over HSA eligibility), so COBRA will not be HDHP-qualifying and HSA contributions stop during the COBRA period. The COBRA bridge is funded by the accumulated balance built during prior HDHP enrollment years — not by new contributions during COBRA.
What happens to my HSA when I enroll in Medicare?
When you enroll in Medicare Part A or Part B, you immediately lose the ability to make new HSA contributions — this is automatic regardless of whether you requested it. Any HSA contribution made after the month of Medicare enrollment is an excess contribution subject to a 6% annual excise tax until corrected. However, the existing accumulated balance in the HSA at the time of Medicare enrollment remains fully available for qualified distributions — including a specific expanded exception for Medicare premiums (Part B, Part D, and Medicare Advantage premiums). A FIRE practitioner who enters Medicare at age 65 with $82,000 remaining in their HSA can use that balance to pay Medicare premiums tax-free for many years. An important Medicare enrollment trap for FIRE practitioners: if you claim Social Security before age 65, Medicare Part A enrollment is automatic and mandatory — triggering the HSA contribution cutoff regardless of your intention to maintain HSA eligibility. FIRE practitioners who want to maximize HSA contributions through age 64 should delay both Social Security and Medicare enrollment until the month they turn 65.
Does COBRA qualify as minimum essential coverage for ACA purposes?
Yes. COBRA continuation coverage is classified as employer-sponsored minimum essential coverage for ACA purposes. This has one important implication for the Phase 1 to Phase 2 transition: while enrolled in COBRA, you are not eligible to receive ACA premium tax credits for a marketplace plan — you cannot double-cover with both COBRA and a subsidized ACA plan simultaneously. The Special Enrollment Period for marketplace enrollment triggered by loss of COBRA coverage begins when COBRA coverage actually ends — not when you decide to stop paying premiums or when you become eligible to terminate it early. This reinforces the sequencing: complete the full 18 months of COBRA (funded by HSA), then transition to the ACA marketplace using the loss-of-coverage Special Enrollment Period triggered by COBRA expiration. Do not attempt to terminate COBRA early to access ACA subsidies before the 18 months are complete — the income restructuring value of the full 18-month window typically exceeds the marginal cost of COBRA for the final months even without the HSA funding advantage.
What is the shoebox strategy for HSA optimization?
The shoebox strategy is the practice of paying all current qualified medical expenses out-of-pocket during HSA accumulation years rather than reimbursing them from the HSA immediately, while retaining all receipts indefinitely. There is no IRS deadline for reimbursing a qualified medical expense from an HSA — an expense incurred in any year of HSA eligibility can be reimbursed in any future year. A FIRE practitioner who paid $3,000 per year in out-of-pocket medical expenses for 10 years while enrolled in an HDHP has accumulated $30,000 in documented qualified expenses that can be extracted from the HSA tax-free at any time. This $30,000 in reimbursable expenses represents zero-MAGI, zero-tax, zero-penalty cash that can be extracted in retirement on demand — effectively converting the HSA into a supplemental retirement account for the amount of accumulated unreimbursed expenses. The shoebox balance supplements the COBRA premium exception, providing additional tax-free HSA liquidity beyond the COBRA bridge amount for the early retirement transition period.
Can you pay COBRA premiums with an HSA?
Yes. Under IRC Section 223(d)(2)(B), HSA distributions used to pay COBRA continuation coverage premiums are explicitly qualified medical expenses and are therefore excluded from gross income and not subject to the 20% penalty tax. This exception applies specifically to COBRA continuation coverage premiums for a former employee who has separated from employment. The HSA distribution used to pay COBRA premiums is completely tax-free — no federal income tax, no state income tax in most states, and no 20% penalty — making it one of the most tax-efficient uses of accumulated HSA capital available to an early retiree or founder on sabbatical.
How much HSA money do you need to pay 18 months of COBRA?
The HSA capital required to fund 18 months of COBRA depends on the plan type and coverage tier. For a family enrolled in a premium employer PPO at $2,200 per month in COBRA premiums, 18 months requires $39,600 in HSA capital. For a standard PPO family plan at $1,800 per month, 18 months requires $32,400. For an HDHP family plan at $1,400 per month, 18 months requires $25,200. For a single filer on a standard PPO at $680 per month, 18 months requires $12,240. FIRE practitioners who have accumulated HSA funds over multiple years of HDHP enrollment during their working years — and invested those funds in index funds rather than holding them in cash — may have $50,000 to $150,000 or more in HSA capital available to fund this bridge strategy. The HSA investment growth that occurred tax-free also funds the COBRA premiums tax-free, making the effective cost of the COBRA bridge dramatically lower than the nominal premium amount when the tax-free compounding is factored into the calculation.