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HEALTH SAVINGS Account & FSA

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Your healthcare dollars go further with pre-tax savings. Contribute to a Health Savings Account (HSA) or Health Care Flexible Spending Account (FSA) to lower your taxable income and cover qualifying expenses. Both help you save — but they work differently.

Health Savings Account (HSA)

When you enroll in an HSA medical option, Oncor makes an automatic contribution to your account based on your coverage level.

Important to Know
  • Make pre-tax contributions through payroll deductions.
  • Earn additional HSA dollars by completing wellness activities and challenges.
  • Open an account to receive Oncor’s contribution—no account means no employer contribution.
  • Factor in wellness rewards (Annual Physical, Healthy Incentive, Amp it Up, and Live Well Challenges) when setting your contribution amount each year.
  • Combined contributions (Oncor + yours) cannot exceed the annual IRS limit. Find current limits here.

You cannot enroll in or contribute to an HSA if you:

  • Have other non-high-deductible medical coverage
  • Are enrolled in Medicare Part A or B, Tricare, or tribal health plans
  • Receive VA medical benefits
  • Are covered under a spouse’s Health Care FSA or medical plan

Check IRS Publication 969 for full details. If you enroll in Medicare while still working, your HSA contributions may become taxable and subject to IRS penalties. For more details, refer to IRS Publication 969.

  • You can change your HSA contributions anytime during the year
  • If you’ve already enrolled and contributing, your elections will automatically roll over for the next year

If you’re a new HSA participant, you’ll need to open a personal HSA at Fidelity. There are no fees to open a Fidelity HSA. If you already have a Fidelity HSA, you don’t need to open a new one.

  1. Go to NetBenefits.com
  2. Follow the prompts to open your individual HSA
  3. Choose how much you want to contribute (optional)

Your dependents can be enrolled in the HSA medical option — even if they have other coverage — as long as you are not covered under their plan.

You can enroll in the HSA medical option if you are still working at age 65+. Here’s what to keep in mind:

  • Do not enroll in Medicare Part A or B if you want to keep contributing to your HSA
  • Contributions after Medicare enrollment may be taxable and penalized
  • Enroll in Medicare within three months of retiring to avoid penalties

Note: If you do enroll in Medicare Part A, your coverage can be retroactive up to six months and HSA contributions made during that retroactive window must be withdrawn by April 15.

If you’re enrolled in an HSA medical option and turning 65 this year:

  • All Oncor HSA contributions (automatic and incentives) will be paid in your paycheck with taxes withheld
  • You may still contribute to your HSA pre-tax — up to IRS limits

You can withdraw HSA contributions at fidelity.com/go/hsa/why-hsa or call Fidelity at 1.866.402.7610. We also recommend that you consult a tax specialist if you’re unsure how this applies to you.

It’s a smart financial move to set aside dollars in your HSA since you can:

  • Reduce taxable income through payroll
    deductions
  • Invest your funds and watch them grow tax-free
  • Pay no taxes on qualified medical expenses

Plus, there are other advantages!

  • HSAs are portable. Your HSA remains yours permanently, even if you change jobs or retire. Whether you want to grow your funds to pay for Medicare premiums or help pay for family deductibles in the future, your HSA provides that flexibility.
  • You choose when to use the funds. Use them to pay current medical expenses or save the funds for future healthcare needs (including retirement). Unused funds can be invested to maximize growth of your account over time.

You Can Use HSA Funds Now

  • Doctor visits and specialists
  • Prescription medications
  • Dental and vision expenses
  • Over-the-counter medications
  • Medical equipment

Or, Save Them for Later!

  • Retirement healthcare costs
  • Medicare premiums
  • Long-term care expenses

Health Care Flexible Spending Account (FSA)

The Health Care Flexible Spending Account (FSA) is available to employees enrolled in Oncor’s HRA medical option. Employees who waive Oncor medical coverage are also eligible to participate.

Your money: You can elect to contribute pre-tax dollars (minimum $120, maximum $3,300 for 2026) through payroll deductions. You must re-enroll every year — your elections do not carry over automatically.

Spending your funds: The official plan year runs January 1 – December 31, 2026, but Oncor offers a grace period that lets you keep spending your Health Care FSA dollars on eligible expenses through March 15, 2027. You may use the Optum Financial debit card to pay for expenses, or you can pay out of pocket and file for reimbursement. You can find eligible and ineligible expenses for the Health Care FSA on optum.com.

Submitting claims: You have until March 31, 2027, to submit reimbursement claims for any expenses incurred between January 1, 2026, and March 15, 2027. Miss that deadline and you forfeit those dollars.

A Few Key Rules

  • You can’t change your contribution mid-year unless you have a qualifying life event (marriage, birth, etc.).
  • Unused Health Care FSA dollars do not roll over to the next plan year.
  • If you also have a Dependent Care FSA, the two accounts are completely separate — no transfers between them.

Visit Optum Financial at optum.com or call 1.877.292.4040 for more information.

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