Pay for Surgery Abroad: HSA, FSA, and Tax Guide (2026)
HSA and FSA funds work for surgery abroad under IRS rules. So does the medical expense tax deduction. Here's exactly what qualifies, what doesn't, and how to document everything.
HSA and FSA funds work for surgery abroad under IRS rules. So does the medical expense tax deduction. Here's exactly what qualifies, what doesn't, and how to document everything.

HSA and FSA funds are eligible for qualified medical expenses abroad under IRS Publication 502 (opens in new tab), and that single fact changes the financial math for every American considering surgery overseas. A $42,000 knee replacement in the US versus $14,800 all-in at a Class 3A hospital in China, paid with pre-tax HSA dollars, means you're saving on both the procedure cost and the tax treatment.
Prices and statistics current as of March 2026.
Yes. HSA and FSA funds are eligible for qualified medical expenses incurred anywhere in the world, per IRS Publication 502 (opens in new tab). The IRS doesn't distinguish between a surgery performed in Houston and one performed in Shanghai. What matters is whether the expense qualifies as "medical care" under Section 213(d) of the Internal Revenue Code.
What qualifies:
The procedure itself (surgeon fee, anesthesia, facility fee, implants)
Prescription medications related to the procedure
Hospital room and board during treatment
Lab tests, imaging, and diagnostic procedures
Nursing services during recovery
What doesn't qualify:
Flights to and from the destination
Hotel or apartment accommodation (unless you're an inpatient)
Food and daily living expenses
Sightseeing or tourism activities
Cosmetic-only procedures (unless medically necessary, e.g., reconstructive surgery after mastectomy)
The qualified portion of a $14,800 all-in China knee replacement is the procedure cost ($11,000), not the travel costs ($3,800). So you'd pay $11,000 from your HSA and $3,800 from after-tax funds. Still a $27,200 savings over the US price. For a breakdown of procedure pricing, see our savings calculator.
HSA and FSA contribution limits for 2026 set the ceiling on how much pre-tax money you can apply toward surgery abroad. The IRS published these figures in Revenue Procedure 2025-19 (opens in new tab).
Account Type | Individual | Family |
|---|---|---|
HSA contribution limit | $4,400 | $8,750 |
HSA catch-up (55+) | +$1,000 | +$1,000 |
FSA contribution limit | $3,400 | $3,400 |
HDHP minimum deductible (for HSA eligibility) | $1,700 | $3,400 |
Here's the thing most people miss: these are annual contribution limits, not balance limits. If you've been contributing to your HSA for years, your accumulated balance could be $20,000, $50,000, or more. HSA balances roll over indefinitely. That accumulated balance is your surgery fund.
FSAs are different. They're use-it-or-lose-it (with a $680 carryover allowance for 2026). If you're planning surgery abroad, max out your FSA contribution in the year you plan to travel and use it for the procedure.
The medical expense tax deduction lets you deduct expenses exceeding 7.5% of your adjusted gross income (AGI) from your federal taxes, per IRS Topic 502 (opens in new tab). This applies to surgery abroad just as it does to domestic care.
Here's how the math works for a household with $80,000 AGI:
Step | Amount |
|---|---|
AGI | $80,000 |
7.5% threshold | $6,000 |
Qualified medical expenses (surgery abroad) | $11,000 |
Deductible amount ($11,000 - $6,000) | $5,000 |
Tax savings at 22% bracket | $1,100 |
That's $1,100 back on top of the $27,200 you saved on the procedure itself. And if your medical expenses are higher (multiple procedures, ongoing treatment, prescription costs), the deduction grows proportionally.
Dr. Martin Gaynor, PhD, a health economist at Carnegie Mellon University who has published research on hospital pricing (opens in new tab) in The Quarterly Journal of Economics, has noted that most Americans don't realize their overseas medical expenses are tax-deductible. "The IRS rules are clear, but patients don't know to ask."
But here's what really gets under my skin: the 7.5% AGI threshold means the people who benefit most are those with the highest medical costs relative to income. (In other words, the system rewards you for being sick and underpaid, which is a peculiar kind of incentive.) For uninsured Americans, this deduction can be a genuine lifeline.
Documentation for IRS compliance requires five specific records, according to IRS Publication 502 (opens in new tab). Keep these for at least 7 years, which is the statute of limitations for audits on amended returns.
Itemized receipt from the foreign hospital. Line-by-line breakdown of every charge: procedure, anesthesia, room, medications, imaging, lab work. The receipt must show the provider name, date of service, description of service, and amount paid. Get this in English from the international department before you leave.
Proof of payment. Bank or credit card statement showing the transaction. If you paid by wire transfer, keep the wire confirmation. If you paid cash, get a hospital-stamped receipt.
Medical necessity documentation. Your US doctor's referral or diagnosis report plus the Chinese hospital's treatment plan. This proves the expense was for medical care, not cosmetic or elective tourism.
HSA/FSA distribution records. If you reimbursed yourself from your HSA, keep the HSA distribution statement matched to the hospital receipt.
Currency conversion documentation. If you paid in RMB, record the exchange rate on the date of payment. Your bank statement or credit card statement shows this automatically.
Ask the hospital's international department for an English-language itemized receipt specifically formatted for US tax purposes. They handle this regularly for American patients. And if you're working with a medical tourism coordinator, they can walk you through the paperwork before you leave the hospital.
Other payment methods fill the gap when HSA/FSA balances don't cover the full procedure cost. A 2024 KFF analysis (opens in new tab) found that 100 million Americans carry medical debt, so knowing your options matters.
Cash savings. The simplest option. Wire transfer to the hospital (most request a 30-50% deposit before admission, balance on discharge).
Personal loan. Credit unions offer medical loans at 6-12% APR. Compare this to CareCredit's 32.99% deferred interest rate, which KFF highlighted as one of the most expensive medical financing options available.
0% APR credit card. Many cards offer 12-18 months at 0% on new purchases. If you can pay off an $11,000 procedure within the promotional period, the financing is free.
Home equity line of credit (HELOC). Rates of 7-9% as of 2026, and the interest is tax-deductible if the loan is under $750,000, per IRS Publication 936 (opens in new tab).
Medical tourism financing companies. A small but growing industry. Compare terms carefully against credit union rates.
What to avoid: CareCredit and similar deferred-interest products. The 32.99% APR kicks in retroactively on the full balance if you miss one payment or don't pay off the promotional balance by the deadline. On an $11,000 charge, that's $3,600+ in surprise interest. Don't do it. For the complete insurance picture, see our coverage guide.
No, HSA and FSA funds can't cover travel costs. Under IRS Publication 502 (opens in new tab), qualified medical expenses include the procedure itself, hospital room and board during inpatient treatment, prescription medications, and lab work. Flights, hotel stays during non-inpatient recovery, meals, and ground transportation aren't qualified medical expenses. However, travel costs related to medical care are deductible on your tax return under the medical expense deduction if they exceed the 7.5% AGI threshold. So while your HSA can't pay for the flight, you can still deduct it on Schedule A. Keep receipts for everything.
If your HSA balance doesn't cover the full procedure cost, use a split-payment approach. Pay the qualified medical expenses from your HSA (procedure, medications, hospital charges) and the remaining costs (travel, accommodation, non-qualified expenses) from after-tax funds. For example, on a $14,800 all-in knee replacement in China: pay $11,000 from HSA for the procedure, $3,800 from savings for travel. You can also use your FSA in the same year for additional qualified expenses up to the $3,400 limit. Some patients build up their HSA balance over 2-3 years before traveling, contributing the annual maximum of $4,400 (individual) or $8,750 (family) each year.
No special reporting is required for foreign medical expenses on your tax return. Report them the same way you'd report domestic medical expenses: on Schedule A, Line 1 (medical and dental expenses), using the total amount in US dollars. If you paid in foreign currency (RMB), convert to USD using the exchange rate on the date of payment, per IRS guidelines. Your bank or credit card statement provides this conversion automatically. Keep the itemized hospital receipt, proof of payment, and medical necessity documentation for 7 years in case of audit. The IRS treats foreign and domestic qualified medical expenses identically under Section 213(d) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Companion travel expenses are deductible only if the companion's presence is medically necessary, per IRS Publication 502 (opens in new tab). For example, if you're traveling for surgery and require a nurse or attendant during the trip, their transportation and lodging qualify. A spouse traveling for emotional support generally doesn't qualify unless a doctor certifies their presence as medically necessary (rare, but possible for patients with cognitive impairments or serious mental health conditions). In practice, most companions' travel costs come from after-tax funds. Budget an additional $1,200 for a companion's flight and $500 for food during a typical 14-21 day medical trip.
Yes, if your timeline allows it. Max HSA contributions for 2-3 years before a planned procedure to build a balance that covers the full qualified cost. At the $4,400 individual limit for 2026, two years of maxed contributions gives you $8,800 (plus any investment growth if your HSA is invested). Three years gives you $13,200. That covers the full procedure cost for most surgeries in China without touching after-tax savings. If you're over 55, the extra $1,000 catch-up contribution accelerates the buildup. Start contributing the maximum as soon as you begin researching your options.
Paying for surgery abroad with HSA dollars is a double discount: 40-80% savings on the procedure, plus the tax benefit of using pre-tax money. On a $42,000 US knee replacement versus $11,000 in China paid from an HSA, you're saving $31,000 on the procedure and avoiding $2,420-$3,630 in income tax (at the 22-33% federal bracket) on the $11,000. Total financial advantage: $33,000-$35,000.
That's not a loophole. It's how the IRS designed these accounts to work. And frankly, it's one of the few parts of the US healthcare system that actually works in the patient's favor.
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This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or financial advice. IRS rules change annually. Consult a qualified tax professional for guidance specific to your situation. Always verify current contribution limits and eligibility requirements with your HSA/FSA administrator.
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