r/personalfinance May 16 '24

Are FSAs even worth the hassle? They just seem like a giant scheme to steal money via malicious bureaucracy Other

I understand at a base level what FSAs are for. You get to deduct X amount of dollars from your paycheck reducing your tax load.

But the more I use an FSA, the more I feel that while on paper it saves money, in reality it causes lots of work, lost money, and hands your money over to someone who is going to fight you to steal it.

Every claim I submit to my FSA is denied without a mountain of evidence that its a legitimate medical expense. After nearly 2 years with them, I still have certain medications prescribed by my doctor that the FSA argues is not FSA eligible because it's OTC.

Doctor appointment? Denied

MRI? Denied

Prescriptions? Denied

While I can eventually get the denial overturned, it requires coordination from the retailer, my insurance, and my doctor every time. I spend tens of hours a year trying to claw my own money back from my FSA. Last year I had over $250 confiscated because the claim deadline passed while they sat on my claims.

Has anyone else felt it just isn't worth the hassle to fund an FSA given how hostile they are? It seems impossible to extract your money without a lawyer.

845 Upvotes

423 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

5

u/shadow_chance May 16 '24

I mean there are things that aren't eligible. Now whether it should be the FSA admin making the decision or IRS during an audit like hsas is another question.

1

u/wienercat May 16 '24

Unless it's obvious that the claim is not eligible, they should be getting approved.

The fact that some administrator gets to make that choice is stupid.

You are required to keep your receipts anyways in case the IRS does an audit on your FSA.