The Internal Revenue Service issued guidance Tuesday to make temporary changes to section 125 cafeteria plans, with the goal of providing tax relief and flexibility in the midst of the novel coronavirus pandemic. The IRS is extending the claims period for health care flexible spending arrangements and dependent care assistance programs and enabling taxpayers to make mid-year changes to their accounts.
The guidance released Tuesday by the IRS deals with the unanticipated changes in expenses faced by many taxpayers as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The IRS is now allowing its previously provided temporary relief for high deductible health plans to be applied retroactively to Jan. 1, 2020, and also increases for inflation the $500 permitted carryover amount for health FSAs to $550.
Megan Moody, CPA, is a managing director and Nashville market leader at the consulting firm Embark. After earning a masters degree in accounting from Belmont University in Nashville, she spent two years in the audit practice at Ernst & Young and then almost 15 years in the health care industry working at both public and private companies.
Jay Lee is the Chief Technology Officer at Colonial Surety Company, spearheading the design and distribution of innovative technology. Colonial Surety, a leading direct and digital insurer, is dedicated to providing customers with a straightforward and seamless experience when purchasing insurance and bonds. The company's online platform, combined with exemplary customer service, simplifies the insurance-buying process and removes the hassle from these transactions.

Sabrina Ticer-Wurr was a summer intern for Financial Planning through the Dow Jones News Fund in 2024.
She was a rising senior at Columbia University studying English Literature and East Asian Languages and Cultures. An aspiring business reporter, she was a deputy university news editor for the Columbia Daily Spectator, where she covered race/DEI and graduate schools.
In Notice 2020-29, the IRS is offering extra flexibility to taxpayers by:
- extending the claims periods for taxpayers to apply unused amounts remaining in a health FSA or dependent care assistance program for expenses incurred for those same qualified benefits through Dec. 31, 2020;
- expanding the ability of taxpayers to make mid-year elections for health coverage, health FSAs and dependent care assistance programs, allowing them to respond to changes in needs as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic; and
- applying earlier relief for high-deductible health plans to cover expenses related to COVID-19, and a temporary exemption for telehealth services retroactively to Jan. 1, 2020.
In conjunction with that notice, the IRS also issued Notice 2020-33, in response to the Trump administration’s Executive Order 13877, which directs the Treasury secretary to “issue guidance to increase the amount of funds that can carry over without penalty at the end of the year for flexible spending arrangements.” The notice ups the limit for unused health FSA carryover amounts from $500, to a maximum of $550, adjusted each year for inflation.


