"An estimate puts the average cost
over a 20-year retirement at about $157,000. That’s almost double the estimate
in 2002.
Retirees just got some encouraging
news: Coming changes to Medicare rules for prescription drugs may help rein in
their health costs.
In part because of recently enacted
limits on retiree prescription drug costs, the estimated cost of health and
medical care in retirement overall didn’t rise this year, according to an annual analysis
from Fidelity Investments.
A 65-year-old retiring this year can expect to spend an
average of $157,500 on health and medical costs over a roughly 20-year retirement, said Hope Manion, senior
vice president and chief actuary at Fidelity Workplace Consulting. The estimate
is the same as it was in 2022 — the first time in almost a decade that the
company’s year-to-year projection has stayed flat.
While the latest estimate is a
“welcome reprieve” from years of increasing health costs, Ms. Manion said,
“it’s still a big honking number.” This year’s estimate is almost double the
company’s estimate of $80,000 in 2002.
The estimated cost is $165,000 for
women, who tend to live longer, and $150,000 for men.
Saving for health expenses in
retirement is a bigger worry than it once was, not only because of rising
medical costs but also because fewer employers offer health benefits to their
retired workers. The Employee Benefit Research Institute, a nonprofit, reported
in a separate analysis that about a quarter of large employers offered retiree
health benefits in 2021, down from half about 25 years ago. Fewer government
employers are offering retiree health insurance as well.
“That’s a huge chunk of the worker
population that now has to worry about something their parents didn’t,” Jake
Spiegel, research associate for health and wealth benefits at the institute,
said in an email.
Fidelity bases its estimate on someone who is enrolled in
traditional Medicare, the federal health program for people 65 and older and
the disabled. Medicare covers hospital stays, doctor visits and lab tests, as
well as prescription drugs. The
estimate includes Medicare premiums, deductibles and co-payments but not the
cost of care that Medicare doesn’t cover, such as dental, vision and long-term
care like assisted living or extended stays in a nursing home.
Some people assume that once they
have Medicare coverage, they won’t have to pay anything out of pocket, but
that’s not the case. So
people should factor those costs into their retirement savings plan, Ms. Manion
said.
For instance, while most people pay no monthly premium for
Medicare Part A, which covers treatment in a hospital, the premium for Medicare
Part B, which covers doctor visits and lab tests, is now $165 a month (or more,
depending on your income), and there’s usually a 20 percent cost share when you
receive treatment. Premiums vary for Part D, which covers prescription drugs.
Starting in 2025, as part of changes made to Part D in the Inflation Reduction
Act of 2022, out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs will be capped at
$2,000 a year.
The Employee Benefit Research
Institute, using a probability approach, found that retirees with original
Medicare may need to accumulate even more
savings than Fidelity estimates to have a strong chance of covering their
health costs because of the financial condition of the Medicare program and
cuts to employer-based retiree health programs.
Earlier this year, the institute estimated that to have a 90
percent chance of having enough money to cover Medicare premiums and
prescription drug costs in retirement, a 65-year-old man would need to have
saved $166,000 and a woman $197,000. (The institute’s estimate assumes the
retirees have a Medicare supplement plan,
also called a Medigap plan, with average premiums to help cover costs that
Medicare doesn’t.)
In some cases, the institute says, the savings needed may be
much greater. A couple with particularly high drug costs, for instance, could
need to save $383,000 to meet the 90 percent threshold.
“It’s a pretty sobering number,” Mr.
Spiegel said.
Spending estimates may be lower for retirees in increasingly
popular Medicare Advantage plans,
federally funded but privately managed health plans that cover medical care as
well as prescription drugs. Such plans have trade-offs, however, like limited
doctor networks.
A man enrolled in Medicare Advantage who has median drug
spending and average use of health care services would need $96,000 to have a
90 percent chance of meeting health spending needs in retirement, while a woman
would need $113,000, according to the institute.
Cheryl Costa, a certified financial planner in Framingham,
Mass., said that the projections might seem scary but that it could help to
think about the estimates in annual or monthly costs, rather than a lump sum.
Over 20 years, Fidelity’s average estimate works out to about $656 a month —
not out of line with what you may already be paying for health care, she said.
“Keep it in perspective,” she said.
Carolyn McClanahan, a certified
financial planner in Jacksonville, Fla., said that there were many variables in
health care costs, and that future changes to Medicare rules were
unpredictable. So rather than focusing on generic estimates to save for
retirement health costs, she said, people should consider their specific
situation, including what they currently pay for health care, their general
health status, their family history and how much health care they use.
“What is your health care mind-set?”
Ms. McClanahan said. If you don’t go to the doctor that often and you’re
exercising and maintaining a healthy weight, your out-of-pocket costs in
retirement may be lower and you can budget accordingly, she said.
Here are some questions and answers
about health costs in retirement:
Are
health savings accounts useful for retirement health costs?
Health savings accounts, or H.S.A.s,
offer valuable tax advantages and can be a great way to save for retiree
medical costs, financial advisers say — if you qualify to contribute to one.
You must be enrolled in a high-deductible health care plan, with a specific
annual deductible (at least $1,500 for individual coverage in 2023).
Money is deposited pretax, grows tax
free and isn’t taxed when you withdraw it, as long as you spend it on eligible
expenses. An individual can contribute up to $3,850 in 2023, plus an extra
$1,000 for those over 55. (Once you enroll in Medicare, you can no longer contribute to an
H.S.A., but you can use the funds to pay for health and medical
expenses.)
One catch is that people often must
use the money in the account to pay for current health expenses, so they don’t
think of them as useful for long-term savings. But if you can afford to pay for
current costs out of pocket, investing your H.S.A. balance can help with
medical costs later in life.
“I encourage savers to think of it
as a retirement account, not a health care spending account,” Ms. Manion said.
Where
can I get an estimate of my Medicare costs in retirement?
A financial planner can help with
this. If you don’t work with one, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, which oversees Medicare, offers an online tool to help you estimate costs, as does
the National Council on Aging.
AARP, the advocacy
group for older people, offers information on its website about affording
retirement health costs.
How
much can long-term care cost?
According to the Genworth Cost of
Care Survey for 2021, the national median cost for assisted living is $4,500 a
month, while the cost of a semiprivate nursing home room is $7,908 a month —
again, costs that Medicare doesn’t cover."
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