Medical devices & supplies
Is incontinence supplies FSA eligible?
Yes — adult incontinence products like briefs, pads, and liners are FSA and HSA eligible.
Adult incontinence supplies are treated as medical care and qualify without a prescription: disposable briefs, protective underwear, bladder-control pads, and underpads all count. This is the opposite of ordinary infant diapers, which are general care and don't qualify.
How to pay for it
- Tap your FSA/HSA debit card at checkout — most pharmacies, optical shops, and many online retailers take it directly.
- Buying online? FSA-only stores pre-filter their catalog to qualified items, so nothing in your cart bounces at checkout.
- No card on hand? Pay out of pocket and file a claim with your administrator — just keep the itemized receipt (a photo is fine).
Does the same answer apply to an HSA?
Yes. FSAs and HSAs share the same qualified-medical-expense rules (IRS Publication 502), so eligibility is identical. The difference is the deadline: FSA money is forfeited at the end of the plan year, while HSA money never expires.
Last reviewed 2026-06-11. Based on IRS Publication 502 and published IRS guidance. Not tax or medical advice — your plan administrator has the final say.