Been looking into HSAs lately and honestly, most people sleep on them. Everyone talks about 401(k) millionaires and IRA wealth, but the HSA story is way more interesting if you actually run the numbers.



Here's the thing -- as of a few years back, there were roughly 30 million HSAs holding about $82 billion combined. That's an average balance of around $2,740. Compare that to 401(k)s averaging over $129k, and yeah, it looks weak. But that's exactly why the opportunity is there.

Fidelity had custody of 818,100 retirement accounts over $1 million (combining 401(k)s and IRAs) back in 2021. Vanguard reported similar numbers. The largest HSA balance situation? Way less crowded. Most people treat HSAs like short-term medical expense buckets, not investment vehicles. That's the gap.

Let me walk through the math. Say someone maxes out their HSA at $3,650 annually but only spends half on actual medical costs. They invest the other $1,825 in a broad market index fund. Over 40 years at a reasonable 10% annual return? You're looking at roughly $800k. Push it to 50 years? Over $2 million. Even at a conservative 8% return, you hit millionaire status by year 50.

The catch is patience. HSAs don't lock you in like IRAs do before age 59.5. You can withdraw anytime for qualified medical expenses. That's a feature for healthcare coverage but a bug for wealth-building -- unless you're disciplined enough to only tap it when you actually need it.

The real insight here is that the largest HSA balance holders are probably people who rarely touched their accounts. They contributed consistently, invested the surplus, and let compounding do its thing. It's not flashy, but it works.

Obviously HSAs exist to help with healthcare costs, not retirement. But if you've got stable income and solid health coverage elsewhere, treating an HSA as a long-term investment account could genuinely change your financial picture. The math doesn't lie -- it just takes decades and discipline.
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