Of course, if the employer paid for everything, the business would likely go bankrupt in no time.
But with the employees paying 100% of the premiums and him only contributing $1,000 where did all the extra money go? He was paying well over $1,000 per year for insurance when DH started there.
An HSA would definitely save me money. I'd be able to pay all of my out-of-pocket medical expenses with pre-tax dollars. That includes things like dental bills, OTC meds, prescription co-pays, doctor co-pays, etc. The cost of our health plan is going up no matter what. Adding the HSA at least buffers that increase.
With ours there are no "Co-pays" any longer.

And yes you can use the HSA to pay dental and visions costs but with ours those things do NOT go toward our $5,000 deductible. So if you're strictly trying to make the HSA "work" for you then you're better off not using the HSA to pay for anything that doesn't get applied to the deductible. Which some of us cannot afford to do.
By the way, if your DH's employer put $4000 into the HSA last year and $1000 this year, that money is still there unless you've spent it all. That's the great thing about HSAs. The money rolls over and earns interest until needed.
We used part of it for extensive dental work for DS12 and for glasses/contacts for DS15 and I. None of which goes toward our deductible.
For those who are struggling to make ends meet or who know they will have medical expenses each year, HSA's are not a good deal at all, in fact they're pretty scary. They punish people who need the insurance most.
EXACTLY!! Not only do I now have to pay monthly premiums but I'm expected to pay into a HSA account.
Here are the terms of our current plan
Key word there is "current" Not only did our monthly premium go up this year but our deductible went up $1,000. I didn't expect there not to be any increases but for the premium and the deductible to go up so much in one year I figure in 5 years our deductible will be $10,000 and the premiums well over $1000.
But a $1000/year deductible plan qualifies as an HSA plan. You could keep the exact same plan you currently have and add an HSA to it.
We couldn't do that without paying way more in monthly premiums not to mention having to fund the account upfront.
The HSAs that we offer are sold with the understanding that the employer is funding at least 50% of the maximum annual contribution. So our groups are not rolling to high deductible plans and then leaving their employees to fund HSAs on their own.
Key word here is "understanding" Does the employer sign a contract stating they will always fund 50% of the annual contribution? My guess would be a big NO! Sure the employer may start out paying the 50% but what happens when they are told by their accountant that they are not required to pay 50%? The employer lowers the contribution and the money saved goes back into the company as profit.

Or with rising medical costs what happens if the annual contribution is $2,000 by the employer but never increases? Costs keep going up but the annual contribution will stagnate.
If the government wants to help fix healthcare get rid of MediCaid and Medicare and start a program that is based more on income. My employer has written off thousands of dollars for an x-celebrity that has amble money to pay his bills yet he gets the same benefit as a person that only earned $25,000 a year.

Thus making places like my employer need to raise costs because some months we're writing off half as much as what we bring in from payments.