Eligible with LMN General Health

Is Essential Oils (for medical care) HSA or FSA eligible?

You can pay for this directly with your HSA or FSA, or reimburse yourself later.

Reviewed against IRS Publication 502 · Updated June 19, 2026

Essential Oils (for medical care) is HSA eligible with a Letter of Medical Necessity

Essential oils for medical care may be eligible for reimbursement with a flexible spending account (FSA), health savings account (HSA) or health reimbursement arrangement (HRA) with a Letter of Medical Necessity from a medical professional. To use HSA funds, your physician must provide a signed Letter of Medical Necessity (LMN) stating Essential Oils (for medical care) treats a specific diagnosed condition.

⚡ Letter of Medical Necessity required

Your LMN must be signed by a licensed provider, name the diagnosed condition, and be retained with your receipts for at least 3 years after the tax year.

How to claim it

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Frequently asked questions

Is Essential Oils (for medical care) FSA or HRA eligible too?

Generally yes, but like an HSA it requires a Letter of Medical Necessity. FSAs and HRAs use the same IRS Publication 502 rules, so you'll need an LMN tying Essential Oils (for medical care) to a diagnosed condition.

Can I use my HSA debit card to pay for Essential Oils (for medical care)?

Only with a Letter of Medical Necessity on file from your physician. Without an LMN this is a non-qualified distribution subject to income tax and a 20% penalty.

Do I need to keep a receipt for Essential Oils (for medical care)?

Yes — for every HSA withdrawal the IRS requires documentation proving the expense was qualified. Keep itemized receipts for at least 3 years after the tax year.

Can I reimburse myself years later for Essential Oils (for medical care)?

Yes — the IRS imposes no time limit on HSA reimbursements. As long as the expense was incurred after your HSA was established and you have documentation, you can reimburse yourself years or even decades later.

Source: IRS Publication 502 — Medical and Dental Expenses. Not tax advice; consult a tax professional for your situation.