COPD / asthma
16M Americans with COPD; 25M with asthma. Pulmonary rehab and ongoing exercise is core treatment — and reimbursable from your HSA/FSA.
16M Americans with COPD; 25M with asthma. Pulmonary rehab and ongoing exercise is core treatment — and reimbursable from your HSA/FSA.
The Quick Take
If you've been diagnosed with copd / asthma (ICD-10: J44.9), your HSA or FSA can reimburse:
- Pulmonary rehabilitation program
- Gym membership (post-rehab)
- Personal training
- Pulse oximeter
- And more (see full list below)
The catch is documentation. Specifically, a Letter of Medical Necessity from your physician confirming that exercise is part of your treatment plan. Without it, FSA/HSA administrators reject most claims for fitness expenses. With it, most admin reimbursements process within 7-14 days of submission.
Why Exercise Is Medically Necessary for COPD / asthma
ATS/ERS and GOLD guidelines list pulmonary rehabilitation and ongoing structured exercise as Class I recommendations. Reduces hospitalizations and improves exercise capacity.
This isn't a stretch interpretation — it's standard medical practice. Your physician already knows it. The IRS already accepts it (under Publication 502, Section 213). HSA and FSA administrators already process it. The only thing missing for most patients is the right paperwork.
What's Reimbursable
With a properly documented Letter of Medical Necessity for copd / asthma, the following are typically covered by FSA/HSA:
Pulmonary rehabilitation program. Documented when used as part of treatment for copd / asthma. Gym membership (post-rehab). Documented when used as part of treatment for copd / asthma. Personal training. Documented when used as part of treatment for copd / asthma. Pulse oximeter. Documented when used as part of treatment for copd / asthma. Stationary bike. Documented when used as part of treatment for copd / asthma. Resistance equipment. Documented when used as part of treatment for copd / asthma.
Reimbursement is determined by your specific FSA/HSA administrator. The most common administrators (HealthEquity, Optum Bank, Lively, Fidelity, WageWorks, Inspira) all process LMN-supported claims for these services.
What Documentation You Need
Your Letter of Medical Necessity should include:
- Diagnosis: COPD / asthma (J44.9 (COPD), J45.x (Asthma))
- Brief clinical history: How long you've had the condition, current treatment context
- Recommended exercise/treatment: Specific (gym membership, personal training, etc.) — not vague ("exercise")
- Why it's medically necessary: One or two clinical sentences justifying the recommendation
- Duration: Typically 12 months
- Physician credentials and signature: Name, NPI, signature, date
A clean, properly-formatted LMN takes your physician under a minute to review and sign — once it's prepared correctly. Most rejections happen at the LMN format level, not the medical necessity level.
How to Start
- Confirm the diagnosis is on your medical record. Log into your patient portal — if you've been seen for copd / asthma in the last 12 months, you're set.
- Prepare your packet. Clinical summary, draft Letter of Medical Necessity, and patient portal message. DoctorNoted builds all three in 5 minutes.
- Send to your own primary care physician. Through your existing patient portal — no awkward calls.
- Submit the signed letter to your FSA/HSA administrator along with your receipts.
Your packet is compliance-reviewed and delivered in under 1 hour — not days. Each one is built specifically for your condition and reviewed by our team before it reaches you. From there, your doctor reviews and signs (their pace, not ours), and your FSA/HSA admin processes the reimbursement on their schedule. Average annual reimbursement once your letter is on file: $1,500-$3,000.
This page is for educational purposes only and is not medical, legal, or tax advice. Consult your physician about your specific health situation, your tax advisor about your tax situation, and your HSA/FSA administrator about reimbursement eligibility. DoctorNoted is not a medical provider and does not determine medical necessity — your physician retains full clinical discretion.
Frequently asked questions
Will my doctor sign this for me?
What if I haven't been formally diagnosed?
How long is the letter valid?
Does this work with my HSA administrator?
Reimbursement is not guaranteed
DoctorNoted prepares documentation. We do not determine medical necessity (your physician does) and we do not approve reimbursement (your FSA/HSA administrator does). Final approval depends on your administrator\'s review, your plan terms, and current IRS regulations.
Get your Letter of Medical Necessity for copd / asthma.
5-minute intake. Compliance-reviewed packet delivered in under 1 hour. Your own doctor signs in under a minute of their time.
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