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As tax season kicks off, the Internal Revenue Service is warning taxpayers and administrators of health spending plans that personal expenses for general health and wellness are not legally considered medical expenses, as it fears some may be misled.
In a press release published Wednesday, the IRS reminded individuals filing their taxes that medical expenses for areas such as weight loss are not deductible or reimbursable under health flexible spending arrangements, health savings accounts, health reimbursement arrangements or medical savings accounts, and that they should beware of companies suggesting otherwise.
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“Legitimate medical expenses have an important place in the tax law that allows for reimbursements,” said Danny Werfel, the IRS commissioner, in a statement. “But taxpayers should be careful to follow the rules amid some aggressive marketing that suggests personal expenditures on things like food for weight loss qualify for reimbursement when they don’t qualify as medical expenses.”
According to the IRS, while some companies claim that a doctor’s note based on self-reported health information is enough to qualify a non-medical nutritional, wellness or exercise program as a reimbursable medical expense, that’s not the case. Legally, such a note does not back a targeted diagnosis-specific activity or treatment that would qualify as a medical expense, but simply a personal expense. Cite: Newsweek Giulia Carbonaro
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Filed under: "Advisors Only", Accounting, Drugs and Pharma, Experts Invited, Funding Basics, Health Economics, Health Insurance, Health Law & Policy, Healthcare Finance, Taxation | Tagged: FSA, Giulia Carbonaro, Health flexible spending arrangement, health savings accounts, Health Spending Plans, HSA, medical savings account, Newsweek | Leave a comment »