CoQ10 and fish oil? I don't see why supplements and vitamins should be paid with pre-tax income. Those are not medications.
And right there is MY take (or rather, the opposite of my take) on issues with all of this. Our "medicines" are generally* homeopathic, herbal (nettle is AWESOME to prevent an asthma attack for me! as is black coffee), and otherwise natural in nature. DS got sick, his lips got chapped, and he couldn't stop licking them, causing damage to his skin. He saw a naturopath who prescribed him a cream made from all natural products.
As far as I know, none of those were or will be eligible for Flex Plan, even though we use those in lieu of the western medicines others would use for the same problems.
DH took supplements as part of a 3 pronged attack on a very very serious health problem around 15 years ago...every bit of his plan would be OOP (it was oop b/c he didn't have insurance, but even if he did, insurance wouldn't have covered anything but the MRIs he had done throughout), even though his plan absolutely worked, and he got rid of the very very serious health problem without a bit of western medicine.
So the flex plan has been useless for us ever since they stopped covering vitamins (about a year ago for our plan, perhaps 2 years)...our way of staying healthy was Emergen-C powder...we have only gone to any doctors when things are serious, while my other friends rush off for visits with the exact same colds we have...we are obviously much cheaper, but we pay out of pocket while they get their stuff covered.
It's an issue that isn't much talked about...but you saying that those things aren't "medicines" just brought it all up. Perhaps YOU don't take them as medicines, but many others do, and they work absolute miracles for many. And without the side effects that the covered, reimbursable, prescription and OTC western medicines have.
Thanks. This was the first year we had to choose some kind of account. I guess mine is an HRA plus the stuff I put in the FSA, which I know I will spend every penny of. I was getting confused with the HSA.
Do HSA's have any pre-tax benefits? I cannot find the sheet they gave us when choosing different options.
If you have an HRA that allows a Flex plan on top of it, you're in a unique situation (as are we). Normal HSAs do NOT allow Flex plans. So you have to be careful getting advice about it, b/c you don't seem to have a normal plan.
*DH has had two big things recently that have stepped away from our normal way of taking care of things... Just wanted to make that really obvious so no one thinks I'm lying here, since I do post about them...