Health Spending Accounts (HSA) in Canada 2025
Updated: March 2025 · bremo.io
A Health Spending Account (HSA) — also called a Health Care Spending Account (HCSA) — is a powerful tax-advantaged benefit that allows Canadians to pay for eligible medical expenses with pre-tax dollars. For employers, HSAs provide flexible health benefits. For self-employed individuals, an HSA can convert personal medical expenses into fully tax-deductible business expenses.
The core tax advantage: Without an HSA, you pay medical expenses with after-tax dollars. With an HSA, those same expenses are paid with pre-tax dollars — effectively reducing their cost by your marginal tax rate. At a 40% marginal rate, a $1,000 dental bill costs you only $600.
How Employer HSAs Work
In an employer-funded HSA, the employer allocates a fixed dollar amount to each employee's account each plan year. The employee can then submit claims for any eligible medical expense — there's no fixed list of covered services as in traditional insurance. The employee is reimbursed from the account, and reimbursements are tax-free to the employee.
Key characteristics:
- Employer contributions are a tax-deductible business expense
- Reimbursements to employees are tax-free
- Unused credits may carry forward (plan-specific rules apply)
- Far more flexible than traditional insurance — any CRA-eligible medical expense qualifies
HSAs for Self-Employed Canadians
This is one of the most valuable and underused tax strategies for incorporated self-employed Canadians. Through a Private Health Services Plan (PHSP) — the formal CRA term — a business owner can pay for personal medical expenses through their corporation and deduct them as a business expense.
How it works:
- The incorporated business owner establishes a PHSP with a third-party HSA administrator
- The corporation contributes to the plan
- The owner incurs a medical expense and submits a claim
- The plan reimburses the expense
- The corporation deducts the contribution as a business expense
- The reimbursement is tax-free to the individual
For unincorporated sole proprietors, a PHSP is also available but with CRA limitations on deductible amounts (capped based on business size and number of arm's-length employees).
Eligible Expenses Under an HSA
The CRA defines eligible medical expenses broadly. Almost anything that qualifies for the Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC) is also eligible under an HSA. Common examples:
- Dental care (all types — cleanings, fillings, crowns, orthodontics, implants)
- Prescription drugs
- Eye exams and prescription eyewear
- LASIK eye surgery
- Physiotherapy, chiropractic, massage therapy, acupuncture
- Psychologist and psychotherapy sessions
- Hearing aids and batteries
- Medical equipment (orthotics, wheelchairs, CPAP machines)
- Ambulance services
- Private health insurance premiums
- Travel for medical care (in some circumstances)
- Fertility treatments
- Cosmetic surgery when medically necessary
What's NOT Eligible
- Purely cosmetic procedures (non-medically necessary)
- Gym memberships (unless prescribed for a specific medical condition)
- Vitamins and supplements (unless prescribed)
- Non-prescription over-the-counter medications
- Life insurance premiums
- Disability insurance premiums
Flexible Spending Accounts (FSAs) vs. HSAs
These terms are sometimes used interchangeably in Canada, but there can be distinctions:
- HSA/HCSA: Health-specific account for medical expenses
- LSA (Lifestyle Spending Account): Employer-funded account for wellness and lifestyle expenses (gym, fitness equipment, etc.) — taxable benefit to employee
- Flex account: Sometimes a combined account with both HSA and LSA components
Only the health/medical component is tax-free to the employee. Lifestyle benefits are taxable.
HSA Administrators in Canada
Several companies administer HSAs for employers and self-employed Canadians:
- Olympia Benefits
- Protexure
- HBSGroup
- Chamber of Commerce Group Insurance Plan
- ClaimSecure
- Major insurers (Sun Life, Manulife, Canada Life) include HCSAs in group plans
For self-employed individuals, standalone PHSP administrators charge a small fee (often 10% of claims) for administering the plan, which is a significantly smaller cost than the tax savings generated.
HSA vs. Medical Expense Tax Credit
Both provide tax relief on medical expenses, but differently:
- The METC is a 15% federal credit on eligible expenses above the 3% income threshold — you only recover 15 cents per dollar
- An HSA converts the expense to a tax-free reimbursement, effectively saving you your marginal tax rate (often 40%+) on the full expense — far more valuable
If your employer provides an HSA, use it first. If you have uncovered expenses above the HSA limit, claim the remainder on your tax return for the METC.
Setting Up an HSA as a Self-Employed Canadian
- Ensure your business is incorporated (or understand the limitations for unincorporated businesses)
- Choose a PHSP administrator
- Set your annual coverage amount
- Keep all medical receipts throughout the year
- Submit claims and receive tax-free reimbursements
- Corporation deducts the contributions on its tax return
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