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My current employer offers an FSA. For 2014 I have opted to contribute the maximum allowed which is $2,500. If, after using that $2,500, I switched employers and they also offered an FSA would I be able to contribute to and use that one as well? Is there a maximum the IRS allows for a year regardless of employer(s)?

I'm married filing jointly and the sole income earner for my family, if that makes a difference.

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  • What makes you think the new employer allows joining FSA mid-year? From my experience they don't.
    – littleadv
    Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 19:49
  • 1
    some do allow mid-year joining. The last 3 companies I have worked for did allow it. Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 21:01
  • 3
    @littleadv plenty do. If you are already an employee but not participating in the FSA, I've seen some allow you to start if you have a "qualifying event" (have a baby, etc)
    – jwmn
    Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 21:13
  • @jwmn if you're not participating, the OP is participating - through the previous employer. The FSA stays with you after you leave.
    – littleadv
    Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 22:39
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    A Medical Savings Account (MSA) stays with you, the Flexible Savings account (FSA) doesn't. In fact any money left in the account is kept by the first employer. Commented Jan 24, 2014 at 11:02

6 Answers 6

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You can have multiple $2500/yr contributions from multiple employers

http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-12-40.pdf

See bottom of page 5 through top of page 6:

However, an employee employed by two or more employers that are not members of the same controlled group may elect up to $2,500 (as indexed for inflation) under each employer’s health FSA.

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According to IRS Publication 969:

For plan years beginning after December 31, 2012, salary reduction contributions to a health FSA cannot be more than $2,500 a year (or any lower amount set by the plan). This amount is indexed for inflation and may change from year to year.

You can only contribute $2,500 yourself, but you could get more than $2,500 of benefit in one year with multiple employers. For example:

  1. Get a job with Employer A, and sign up for a $2,500 FSA.
  2. Spend all of the $2,500 in the first month, but only make $200 of contributions
  3. Quit and get a job at Employer B. Since you have only made $200 of contributions, you can sign up for a FSA of $2,300.
  4. Spend all of the $2,300.

Unfortunately, this screws Employer A out of $2,200 (and it's probably not a good reason to switch jobs on its own) but according to the IRS you are not allowed to pay it back to them (and they cannot request it). So in this scenario you'd get $4,800 of medical benefits for $2,500 in pretax money.

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  • Thanks for the answer. My specific case was that I was working for a company that was going out of business mid-year.
    – jwmn
    Commented Apr 9, 2014 at 15:28
  • For every employee that "screws" company A theres probably a few that end up not using all the money, thus losing their contributions.
    – Andy
    Commented Jan 26, 2015 at 23:52
  • @Andy Yes, I'm sure companies come out ahead, or they wouldn't offer it. Commented Jan 27, 2015 at 2:57
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I recently changed jobs and the benefits specialist at my new gig directly contradicted the other answers here. Specifically, my situation was:

  1. At my last company, I started in October 2013 and elected to contribute $1000 for the remainder of the year, knowing we had some upcoming medical expenses. We consumed most of this money before 2014 rolled around ($800-$900 if I recall correctly).
  2. I elected to contribute $2,000 for 2014.
  3. My wife incurred some heavy expenses and we spent the entire amount in ~4 months.
  4. I was laid off in May, found a new job and started in June.
  5. The benefits specialist told me I could contribute a full $2,500 to my new FSA, if I elected to. Her exact words were "It’s a per employer per plan year maximum."

For what it's worth, both companies' FSA plans are through the same benefits provider - but I doubt that has any impact on the situation. I work in software, so benefits are generally competitive, which may have to do with being allowed to join mid year. (Aside: are corporations really too modest to say their benefits are "really good"?) Finally, the payroll deductions my new employer is taking from my pay seem to add up to a little under half of my elected FSA contribution for 2014 before the plan year rolls over January 1st. (See Update 3 below for more on this.) I mention this because I'm essentially dipping yet another time into free FSA money. I thought there was a quote in another answer explaining how this is an IRS rule that favors employees over employers, but it does not seem to be on this page any more, and I can't find another question on the topic.

I have reviewed IRS Publication 969, which Aaron Brager quoted above, in attempt to confirm this, and it does not mention changing employers during a plan year. The closest it mentions to variations in eligibility or joining/leaving the plan is the following paragraph:

When to Contribute

At the beginning of the plan year, you must designate how much you want to contribute. Then, your employer will deduct amounts periodically (generally, every payday) in accordance with your annual election. You can change or revoke your election only if there is a change in your employment or family status that is specified by your plan.

So a change in employment qualifies for a change in the plan, but that's still pretty vague. The only other information in the document regarding balances is around carryover/grace period and use-it-or-lose-it status at the end of a plan year, with no mention of ending the plan mid-year.

In conclusion, my experience so far has agreed with the link Shawn provided in a comment above. I would however prefer to have an answer direct from an IRS source. I am submitting a question to the IRS website, and I will edit this answer here if they give an applicable reply.

Update 1: The IRS replied to my email question with probably the least helpful response possible.

The Answer To Your Question Is: Thank you for your inquiry. We assume your inquiry is regarding a health flexible spending arrangement (FSA). Unfortunately, we are unable to provide a response to your question via this service. Instead please visit our web site, www.irs.gov, to find the answer to your question. The following resources, which you can find on www.irs.gov, cover some of the more commonly asked questions:

  • Pub 17 for Individuals
  • Pub 583 for Business
  • Pub 15 & 15A for Employers
  • Pub 510 for Excise Tax
  • Pub 559 for Estate and Gift Tax
  • Circular 230 for Tax Professional

You can also search for the following using the search box on the irs.gov home page, or you can simply click on the "Help and Resources" tab: *Interactive Tax Assistant which is a tax law resource that takes you through a series of questions and provides you with responses to tax law questions. *IRS Tax Map which gives you single-point access to tax law information by subject

You can also call Tele Tax: 1-800-829-4477 for information on a variety of tax topics. In addition many commercial software packages also provide answers to tax questions or you may seek help from a tax professional.

Requests for private letter rulings may be submitted to the IRS Office of Chief Counsel at the address shown below. The IRS is required to charge a fee for this service.

IRS Office of Chief Counsel
ATTN: CC:DOM:CORP: TSS
P.O. Box 7604
Ben Franklin Station
Washington, D.C. 20044

Thank you for using this service and we apologize for any inconvenience.

I haven't reviewed the Publications they mention, but as half of them don't even seem relevant to health or even individual related taxes, it appears the matter will remain a mystery for now.

Update 2: I consulted a family friend who is a tax professional (corporate accountant, I believe). Unfortunately, she was unfamiliar with the exact rules of FSAs. She was under the impression that an annual contribution limit is always firm. For example, you can't reset your 401k contributions by going to a different investment firm (or to a different employer who uses a different investment firm).

However, she does not have a direct source for her answer either. I remain on the search.

Update 3: I found out at the start of this year that the FSA election I made for my new employer actually has a term of June 1st, 2014 through May 31st, 2015. I elected to contribute $2,000 to this FSA and consumed it all before Dec 31st, 2014. I've not received my W2's yet, but I expect my total FSA contributes for the 2014 tax year (Jan 1 to Dec 31) to be around $3,000 (with $4,000 redeemed and received), so I may get an answer from the IRS when I send in my 1040. If they don't say anything, I will direct an inquiry to the plan administrator. At this point, I have a suspicion that the exact rules for FSA's are negotiated and administrated by the plan, and only have to conform to certain IRS guidelines.

Update 4: I received my W2's and filed my taxes. My forms do not show FSA contributions separately, but they do show pre-tax deductions, and they seem to ad up to what I estimated: $1000 contributed from each employer I had in 2014. I am still contributing to my current employer's June 2014 - June 2015 FSA election.

The IRS has kindly processed my 1040 Tax Forms and W2's and issued the full amount of refund that I calculated. So that's at worst an implicit acceptance by the IRS of my FSA situation, not worthy of an audit by itself. Whether or not they come along and correct it later remains to be seen.

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  • 1
    I'll be happy to switch the accepted answer if you get an authoritative answer from them.
    – jwmn
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 18:13
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I believe that the limit is an annual limit.

A big concern you will have if you switch companies is that your ability to use the FSA money is cutoff after you are no longer using their health insurance. That might take place on your last day of work, or the end of the month, but you need to investigate the cutoff date.

Because the old company will not have collected all of the $2500 from you will still have some room to make contributions with the new company.

Also realize that the medical FSA allows you to spend money before it is collected. The child care FSA doesn't allow negative balances. When you leave the first company you may have withdrawn more than they collected. Theoretically they could try and collect it from you but I don't know of anybody that this has happened to.

If the old company collected $1250 of the $2500 from you via payroll deductions, and you have submitted claims for $2000, personally I would limit my contributions via the second company to $500 to avoid testing the system.

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  • So there is a IRS-stated annual limit of $2,500 per person?
    – jwmn
    Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 21:14
  • From some source I think the 2500 is a per-plan-per-person limit. see this page: wageworks.com/employers/employer-resources/…
    – Shawn
    Commented May 13, 2014 at 16:36
  • @Shawn your link has died. Could you look for another one?
    – Dacio
    Commented Jul 1, 2014 at 13:50
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Found on www.irs.gov Bulletin: 2012-26 June 25, 2012 Notice 2012-40

All employers that are treated as a single employer under 414b,c,or m, relating to controlled groups and affiliated service groups, are treated as a single employer for purposes of the $2,500 limit. If an employee participates in multiple cafeteria plans offering health FSA's maintained by members of a controlled group or affiliated service group, the employee's total health FSA salary reduction contributions under all of the cafeteria plans are limited to $2,500. However, an employee employed by two or more employers that are not members of the same controlled group may elect up to $2,500 under each employer's health FSA.

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  • Do you have a link to that doc?
    – jwmn
    Commented Nov 11, 2016 at 14:36
  • @jwmm: using the search box on www.irs.gov top hit is the IRB publication irs.gov/irb/2012-26_IRB/ar09.html (plus an apparent sessionid) and this text is in section III. Although the separate n-12-40 file was already linked in the accepted answer two years ago. Commented Nov 12, 2016 at 3:41
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Would that because it is likely if the two companies are members of different controlled groups the medical companies would also be different? And thus would fall in line with the above statement about "A big concern you will have if you switch companies is that your ability to use the FSA money is cutoff after you are no longer using their health insurance." If you left and went to the 2nd company and they had the same health insurance, than you would have already consumed benefits.....

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