A Health Savings Account (HSA) is treated like an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) in this instance. The HSA would be rolled over into a HSA in your name. If the HSA is to remain with the same trustee that might be able to be done simply by having your ex complete a form with the trustee instructing the trustee to move the HSA into your name. Otherwise contact the trustee you intend to use to ask what is needed to set up the HSA and get the rollover done. I suggest you do a trustee to trustee transfer in that instance.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Ohio
The HSA is in my soon to be ex-husband's name. During the divorce settlement, I was awarded the entire amount. What do I need to do to get these funds transferred?
While I think that I agree with Taxing Matters as to how it is supposed to work, I personally have never encountered a divorce settlement that transferred an HSA to the other spouse. Therefore I have no experience of it in practice. With as many tax clients as our practice has, if we have never encountered an HSA transfer in a divorce, then odds are that not many happen. If not many happen, the plan administrators may be uncertain as to how to handle such transfers.Do you happen to know what kind of form that is? When I've talked to the company that holds the HSA right now they keep telling me that he has to completely close the account and give me the money. Then I open a new one in my name - taking the tax hit of course. It's like they've had this issue come up before!
For HSA transfers specifically? If so, you might want to link one or two here.Google will get op to several sources re trustee to trustee transfer information...
Yes, but there is nothing on that site about rolling over HSAs to another party in a divorce scenario. Those are all about rolling about your own HSA into another account of your own. What is really needed is something along the lines of a QDRO for an HSA.http://www.hsaedge.com/2016/10/08/how-to-rollover-hsa-funds/
I found several like this