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Health Insurance FAQs
Health Insurance FAQs

questions and answers about health insurance and employee benefits

What is a Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA)?

March 27, 2025March 28, 2025

A Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) is an employer-funded benefit that reimburses employees for certain healthcare expenses. Unlike an HSA or FSA, only the employer can contribute to an HRA—employees do not add any money themselves.

Employers decide:

  • How much money to make available to each employee

  • What expenses are eligible for reimbursement (within IRS guidelines)

  • Whether unused funds roll over from year to year

Employees typically pay out of pocket for an eligible expense, then submit a claim for reimbursement. Some HRAs may also provide a debit card to simplify the process, but receipts or documentation are still usually required.

HRAs are highly flexible and can be designed in different ways. For example:

  • Some are tied to a traditional group health plan

  • Others, like ICHRAs or QSEHRAs, can reimburse premiums for individual coverage

One important thing to remember: The employer owns the HRA, so unused funds usually stay with the employer if the employee leaves the company—unless it’s a retiree HRA or another arrangement that allows continued access.

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Tax-Advantaged Accounts

  • POPs – Premium Only Plans
  • FSAs – Flexible Spending Accounts
  • DCAs – Dependent Care Accounts
  • HSAs – Health Savings Accounts
  • HRAs – Health Reimbursement Arrangements
  • MERPs – Medical Expense Reimbursement Plans
  • MPRAs – Medicare Premium Reimbursement Arrangements
  • ICHRAs – Individual Coverage HRAs
  • QSEHRAs – Qualified Small Employer HRAs
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