The Complete HSA Eligibility List

Here it is — the most-comprehensive eligibility list available on the web. From A to Z, items and services deemed eligible for tax-free spending with your Flexible Spending Account (FSA), Health Savings Account (HSA), Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) and more will be here, complete with details and requirements. Important Reminder: HSAs, FSAs, HRAs and other account types listed may not all be the same. Be sure to check with your administrator to confirm if something is eligible before making a purchase.

Here it is — the most-comprehensive eligibility list available on the web. From A to Z, items and services deemed eligible for tax-free spending with your Flexible Spending Account (FSA), Health Savings Account (HSA), Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) and more will be here, complete with details and requirements. Important Reminder: FSAs, HRAs and other account types listed may not all be the same. Be sure to check with your administrator to confirm if something is eligible before making a purchase.

Organ Donation: HSA Eligibility

Organ Donation: eligible with a Health Savings Account (HSA)
Organ donation expenses are eligible for reimbursement with a flexible spending account (FSA), health savings account (HSA), or a health reimbursement arrangement (HRA). Organ donation expenses are not eligible with a dependent care flexible spending account (DCFSA), or a limited-purpose flexible spending account (LPFSA).

What is organ donation?

Organ donation involves removing a healthy organ and tissue from a human body and using it to replace an absent or unhealthy organ in another human body. Usually the organ donor is a recently deceased human, but it may also be a living human with a second organ such as a kidney, or organ tissue such as bone marrow (MedlinePlus).

The full list of organs that can be donated includes: the kidneys, heart, liver, pancreas, intestines, lungs, skin, bone and bone marrow, and the cornea.

Organ donors can be any age, gender or race. Organ donors in the United States under the age of 18 must have parental permission. It's important if one desires to be an organ donor that they indicate so on their identification or driver's license. Most organ donation occurs immediately after death, and identification is the primary means by which a hospital staff will determine whether one's organs may be harvested (OrganDonor.gov). There is a constant shortage of most organs, including waitlists for organs that are slowly degraded by disease and require eventual donation or replacement.

The costs of organ donation by both the donor and recipient are eligible for reimbursement with consumer-directed healthcare accounts. Organ donation never costs anything to the donor, but the recipient of an organ may be responsible for the donor's expenses in certain situations. All expenses related to organ donation are eligible for reimbursement.

There is no cutoff age for donating organs, and doctors will assess organ health at an individual's time of death when determining whether the organs can be harvested for donation purposes.

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