Billions of pretax healthcare funds go to waste each year. Retailers want to cash in.

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If potential consumer spending dollars are going unused, retailers would like to know about it. But for retailers selling products eligible for medical flexible spending and health savings accounts in the United States, getting consumers to spend this allocated money is harder than it seems. 

Flexible spending accounts and health savings accounts allow people to set aside pretax money, sometimes straight out of their paycheck, to pay for certain medical expenses, per the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 

Both accounts can be offered by employers in the United States to help offset healthcare costs for employees, according to HealthCare.gov. While FSAs and HSAs can be employer and/or employee-funded, an HSA is an employee-controlled savings account, is coupled with enrollment in a high-deductible healthcare plan, offers higher contribution limits than an FSA, and allows funds to carry over to the next year indefinitely. 

An FSA, on the other hand, is usually controlled by an employer (though they aren’t required to contribute in addition to an employee), has lower contribution limits and has restrictions on annual carry-over limits (a largely use-it-or-lose-it approach).

“In November 2024, our research indicated that 77% of FSA funds had already been depleted,” Numerator analyst Shawn Paustian said in emailed comments. “Given this rate of expenditure, we could anticipate that roughly a tenth of FSA funds, amounting to several billion dollars, will go unused by the end of the year.”

According to a May 2024 report from the Employee Benefit Research Institute, roughly half of FSA account holders forfeited funds to their employer in 2022, with the average forfeiture being $441. 

As money goes unused, retailers are starting to pay more attention to this consumer group – and how to raise shoppers’ awareness.

Raising awareness around eligible products

Some consumers might be surprised to learn that they can use these pretax dollars on more than doctor appointment copays, prescription drugs and sudden medical service costs.

There’s a variety of eligible home healthcare products. Online retailer FSA Store — which declined an interview for this story — has an entire webpage dedicated to “Surprisingly Eligible” products. On there, consumers can buy everything from a $455 light therapy mask from skin care brand Dr. Dennis Gross targeting acne to a $1,599 full-body recovery compression bundle from HyperIce. It also maintains a large eligibility list for customers to read through.

What these products have in common is that they meet the IRS’ determination of what is a covered medical expense. This makes a wide variety of products eligible, such as menstrual care products, sunscreen, hand sanitizers, allergy medicines, breast pumps and more. 

Consumer awareness around what is and isn’t eligible is a major obstacle for companies looking to capitalize on those spending funds, though, Paustian said.

Research from Numerator showed that “when presented with a list of eligible products, consumers were only able to correctly identify less than half,” Paustian noted. “In fact, 25% of consumers report difficulty determining whether products they see on store shelves are FSA/HSA eligible. … The list of eligible products continues to expand, which naturally increases potential usage.”

With more items becoming eligible, companies are vying to showcase them to consumers. Plenty of brands now have web pages or blogs dedicated to showcasing FSA and HSA-eligible products. Examples include premium sunscreen brand Supergoop, menstrual product brand Thinx and skin care company Shiseido, to name just a few. 

The move comes as beauty retailers have increasingly mingled with the health and wellness categories over the past few years. Ulta previously expanded its wellness-related inventory in 2023 when it announced its in-store wellness spaces — called “The Wellness Shop” — would launch into more than 1,330 locations nationally. In January, Target too announced plans to add over 2,000 wellness related items to its offerings, including digestive health and wellness tech products.

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