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Medicare Premiums

All articles tagged with #medicare premiums

The Capital You Need to Forever Cover Medicare Premiums
personal-finance6 days ago

The Capital You Need to Forever Cover Medicare Premiums

Medicare costs around $5,000 per year per person when combining Part B, Part D, and Medigap, with Part B rising in 2026. To fund that forever, you’d need about $143,000 at a 3.5% yield or $100,000 at 5%. A 3.5% dividend-growth portfolio could grow that income over 20 years, while a high-yield, flat 10% plan risks principal erosion. The piece urges readers to tally the past year’s Medicare spending, compare yield-based strategies, model IRMAA with future income, and plan retirement in manageable steps—cover Medicare first, then other expenses—with fiduciary guidance.

Beat the IRMAA Cliff: Drain the 401(k) Before 70 for Bigger Social Security Payoffs
personal-finance18 days ago

Beat the IRMAA Cliff: Drain the 401(k) Before 70 for Bigger Social Security Payoffs

The piece explains a six-year strategy for high earners with large traditional 401(k) balances: drain pre-tax funds from 64 to 70 to keep MAGI just under the first IRMAA tier (~$218,000 for joint filers) and then claim Social Security at 70. This can shrink the next year’s RMDs (e.g., from about $94k on a $2.5M balance to roughly $53k on a smaller balance) and, by delaying Social Security to 70, boost benefits by about 24% (and survivor benefits). Roth conversions can help fill tax headroom without large cash-outs. Be mindful that IRMAA uses a two-year lookback, so timing is crucial to avoid higher premiums—this is a sponsor-backed, strategy-focused retirement planning approach.

2026 Social Security Changes and Payment Schedule Overview
economy6 months ago

2026 Social Security Changes and Payment Schedule Overview

Social Security benefits for 2026 will increase by 2.8%, affecting over 75 million Americans, with payments starting in January. While benefits rise, higher Medicare premiums and new tax deductions will influence retirees' net income. The average benefit for retired workers will increase to $2,071, and a new $6,000 tax deduction for seniors will be available through 2028.