Subscribe

2023 was boom year for health savings accounts

Devenir reports that HSAs saw robust growth in invested assets last year, along with increases in contributions and withdrawals.

Health savings account assets saw significant growth across the US in 2023, and there’s more to come in the years ahead, according to a new report from Devenir.

The latest analysis from the company, a leading provider of HSA investment solutions, draws from data primarily collected at the start of 2024.

Devenir’s 27th semi-annual review of the HSA sector shows that by the end of last year, assets in the space surged to approximately $123 billion – up from $104 billion at the close of 2022 – spread over 37 million accounts.

“Our latest survey results not only show robust growth in HSA assets but also projects a strong, upward trajectory for the future, indicating a steady and significant expansion of the HSA market,” Jon Robb, senior vice president of research and technology at Devenir, said in a statement.

Notwithstanding a slowdown in the creation of new accounts, last year witnessed a 19 percent increase in HSA assets and a 5 percent growth in the number of accounts.

The report highlighted the resilience of HSA investment assets which, after facing one of the most brutal stock markets in history during the first half of 2022, rebounded impressively in 2023, with a 37 percent gain.

The comeback brought total investment assets in HSAs to $46 billion, accounting for 38 percent of the money held in those accounts by year-end.

Investment activity in HSAs showed remarkable consistency, with nearly 8 percent of all account holders – representing 2.9 million HSAs – having at least some of their dollars invested even as the pace of growth moderated compared to previous years.

The report also detailed a rise in transactional activity within the accounts. HSA contributions increased by 7 percent to $50 billion, and withdrawals escalated by 13 percent, amounting to $39 billion over the year.

Looking at the breakdown of contributions, Devenir estimates 26 percent of dollars going into HSAs in 2023 originated from employers while 64 percent came from employees’ wallets, with the balance coming from other sources.

Looking ahead, Devenir forecasts a promising outlook for HSAs. By the end of 2026, it projects the market will expand to 44 million accounts holding $168 billion, with investment assets potentially reaching $71.4 billion.

“HSA providers project HSA industry asset growth of 14% in 2024, while anticipating their own business will grow by 23% during the same period,” the report said.

Happy employees lead to higher stock prices, says Irrational Capital founder

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Fintech startup Archive Intel secures $1M seed funding

The wealth tech provider is broadening its communications archiving and compliance footprint and boosting its AI capabilities.

The RIA M&A trend started off strong in Q1 2024

Devoe & Company research reveals uptick in transactions as succession challenges, quest for talent, and growth ambitions persist.

Wealthspire to snap up all-women practice in Ohio

The New York-based RIA is extending its Midwestern presence with plans to acquire the $420M independent serving multigenerational clients.

Raymond James boosts Northeast presence with $800M team

The five-advisor group based in Massachusetts has joined the firm’s independent advisor unit after being affiliated with Commonwealth.

First Citizens Wealth boosts private investments for HNW clients

The North Carolina-based wealth firm is expanding its private equity, private debt, private real estate options for qualified individuals and institutions.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print