I've been digging into whether and how you can use HSA (Health Savings Account) and FSA (Flexible Spending Account) funds for GLP-1 medications. The answer is nuanced, so I wanted to share what I've learned and get input from others who've navigated this.
What's clearly eligible:
- GLP-1 prescriptions filled through insurance (copays, coinsurance) — YES, HSA/FSA eligible
- Doctor visit copays related to GLP-1 management — YES
- Lab work related to GLP-1 monitoring — YES
What's a gray area:
- Compounded GLP-1 medications purchased cash-pay — technically eligible IF you have a valid prescription and it's for a medical condition (not cosmetic weight loss)
- Telehealth consultation fees — generally YES if it's a medical consultation
- Injection supplies purchased separately — YES (syringes, needles, alcohol swabs are all eligible)
What's NOT eligible:
- OTC weight loss supplements (even if purchased alongside GLP-1)
- Gym memberships (some exceptions with LMN — Letter of Medical Necessity)
The tax savings are significant: if you're in the 24% federal bracket + 5% state, paying through HSA saves you ~29% on every dollar spent. On $200/month for compounded semaglutide, that's $696/year in tax savings.