Healthcare costs in retirement: known as the BIG UNKNOWN of retirement finances. Even among folks enthusiastic and knowledgeable about personal finance, I found this subject broached with some trepidation.

Turns out, it may be less daunting than initially expected. Make no mistake, it is a sizable chunk of change. Plus, it remains the most uncertain component of retirement planning. But we can try and make some headway.

An Idea of HealthCare Costs

As a family of four, we buy our health insurance on the individual/small business market, being a couple of self-employed docs. On a HSA-eligible high deductible plan, our premiums are $14000 a yr and out of pocket (OOP) max for the family is $13000 in 2019. This brings up the total to $27000 a yr on healthcare. Hopefully, we will not reach OOP max every year if only the kids can keep themselves from falling off couches or getting tangled in their own feet. But for budgeting purposes, you have to consider the total of premiums + OOP for each year.

If medical expenses come all at once, as they sometimes do- you can reach out of pocket max real quick. Healthcare costs budgeting should include premiums + OOP max
Two simultaneous forearm fractures will get you to out-of-pocket max in a jiffy

Most employed folks pay only about 25% of their healthcare costs- the rest of the tab is picked up by their employers. Even that small percentage gets taken off their paychecks before it comes to them. So, it is a sticker shock to most people who are looking into their true healthcare costs for the first time.

What Do Retirement Healthcare Costs look like?

To begin with, there are 2 camps we need to talk about separately: Early Retirement and Traditional Retirement.

Healthcare Costs in Early Retirement

With early retirement, you are likely years away from Medicare eligibility (65 yrs). So what are your options?

If based on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) and number of persons in the household, you are eligible for subsidies, it may be worthwhile to check on the ACA Marketplace/ Health insurance Exchange.
Premiums on individual plans cannot be tiered based on pre-existing conditions but do increase with age of the insured.

Browse around on eHealthinsurance.com or goHealthInsurance.com to compare prices in the individual market. Going with a broker is also fine- they are paid by commission from the insurance companies. Just be mindful of the usual conflicts of interest.

Some other options to consider

Healthcare Costs in Traditional Retirement

This assumes you retire at age 65, when you become eligible for Medicare. So, you are looking at lower costs than early retirement, at least the way things stand now.

An Introduction to Medicare

Medicare has 4 parts to it.

Beneficiaries pay premiums on Parts B and D. Part D premiums vary by state. Premiums are higher for higher income individuals in the form of surcharges.

Supplemental Coverage


To keep these out of pocket costs lower or more predictable, you can get supplemental insurance:

Medicare covers only a part of all costs. The rest (deductibles, copays, coinsurance) comes from enrollees (cost-sharing). So, your total healthcare costs include premiums + cost sharing + the stuff that Medicare doesn’t include: dental, vision, hearing. And the biggie: Long term care- that we’ll talk about in a bit.

This does seem like a lot of things to cover out of pocket but the costs are significantly lower than the individual health insurance market. For e.g., in 2019- Parts B and D premiums are a total of $2000 annually (nationwide average). So, if working at least part-time to age 65 in order to stay on an employer’s health plan is an option, it does save you a ton of money.

Scary Stats

Fidelity, which puts out the best-known annual survey on this subject, estimates that a 65-yr old couple, retiring in 2019 will need $285000 in savings to cover their healthcare needs throughout retirement, compared with $280,000 in 2018. For single retirees, the health care cost estimate is $150,000 for women and $135,000 for men (thanks to higher longevity).

HVS financial has a higher estimate: An average healthy 65 yo couple in 2019 will spend $394000 in retirement for healthcare costs, including premiums and OOP costs.

These estimates:

We will stop here for this post and break down what these numbers mean in Part 2.

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