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When employees
pay for their benefits with pre-tax dollars, they usually save money
on state (in most states), federal income and Social Security taxes.
This can add up to as much as 30 percent or more in tax savings,
depending on the employee's tax bracket.
There is some
risk associated with participating in FSA's. For the employee participant,
the "use-it-or-lose-it" rule requires that any monies remaining
in the employee's FSA account at the end of the plan year be forfeited,
if not claimed by the end of the grace period. The company may use
forfeiture dollars to pay for administration of the FSA plan, or
it can split the money between the participants on a uniform basis.
For the employer,
the risk is with the reimbursement methodology for Health Care FSA
participants. According to the Uniform Coverage Rule, participants
in a Health Care Flexible Spending Account may be reimbursed the
entire amount of their annual election after they have contributed
their first payroll-deducted funds to the account. Unlike the Dependent
Care FSA, Health Care FSA participants do not have to wait until
they have enough money in their account to receive reimbursements.
If the participant
receives their total election before the end of the plan year and
terminates his or her employment, the company loses the amount of
the difference between the funds contributed and the funds reimbursed
to the employee.
CBG helps employers
and employees understand that choice, by far, is the most valuable
aspect of a flexible benefits plan. We work with employers to help
them implement Flexible Benefit Plans. These FSA plans are supported
through an administration arrangement with Ceridian Benefit Services,
the country's largest administrator for Flexible Spending Accounts,
COBRA, and Section 125 plans. Ceridian provides high-quality flexible
benefits administration to thousands of employers across the U.S.
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