Tag Archives: Medicare health plans

What to know as record 8.7% Social Security COLA goes into effect

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As inflation has kept prices high in 2022, Social Security beneficiaries may look forward to a record high cost-of-living adjustment in 2023.

“Your Social Security benefits will increase by 8.7% in 2023 because of a rise in cost of living,” the Social Security Administration states in the annual statements it is currently sending to beneficiaries.

The 8.7% increase will be the highest in 40 years. It is also a significant bump from the 5.9% cost-of-living increase beneficiaries saw in 2022.

The increase is “kind of a double-edged sword,” according to Jim Blair, a former Social Security administrator and co-founder and lead consultant at Premier Social Security Consulting, which educates consumer and financial advisors on the program’s benefits.

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“It’s good for people on Social Security,” Blair said. “It’s not so good for the economy with inflation.”

Social Security benefit checks will reflect the increase starting in January.

The average retiree benefit will go up by $146 per month, to $1,827 in 2023 from $1,681 in 2022, according to the Social Security Administration The average disability benefit will increase by $119 per month, to $1,483 in 2023 from $1,364 in 2022.

What’s more, standard Medicare Part B premiums will go down by about 3% next year to $164.90, a $5.20 decrease from 2022. Medicare Part B covers outpatient medical care including doctors’ visits.

Monthly Part B premium payments are often deducted directly from Social Security checks. Due to the lower 2023 premiums, beneficiaries are poised to see more of the 8.7% increase in their monthly Social Security checks.

“The good news about these letters is people are realizing 100% of the 8.7% lift,” said David Freitag, a financial planning consultant and Social Security expert at MassMutual.

“Of course, the economy is inflated at a frightful rate, but this represents the value of cost-of-living adjusted benefits from Social Security,” Freitag said.

Few other income streams in retirement offer cost-of-living adjustments, he noted.

What to look for in your Social Security statement

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If you’re wondering how much more you stand to see in your checks, the personalized letter from the Social Security Administration will give you a breakdown of what to expect.

That includes your new 2023 monthly benefit amount before deductions.

It will also tell you your 2023 monthly deduction for premiums for Medicare Part B, as well as Medicare Part D, which covers prescription drugs.

The statement will also show your deduction for voluntary tax withholding.

The good news about these letters is people are realizing 100% of the 8.7% lift.

David Freitag

financial planning consultant and Social Security expert at MassMutual

After those deductions, the statement shows how much will be deposited into your bank account in January.

Of note, you do not necessarily have to be receiving Social Security checks now to benefit from the record 2023 increase, Blair noted.

“The good news is you don’t have to apply for benefits to receive the cost-of-living adjustment,” Blair said. “You just have to be age 62 or older.”

When you may pay Medicare premium surcharges

If your income is above a certain amount, you may pay a surcharge called an income related monthly adjustment amount, or IRMAA, on Medicare Parts B and D.

This year, that will be determined by your 2021 tax returns, including your adjusted gross income and tax-exempt interest income. Those two amounts are added together to get your modified adjusted gross income, or MAGI.

In 2023, those IRMAA premium rates kick in if your modified adjusted gross income is $97,000.01 or higher and you filed your tax return as single, head of household, qualifying widow or widower or married filing separately; or $194,000.01 or higher if you are married and filed jointly.

Notably, just one dollar over could put you in a higher bracket.

“It’s important for everyone to make sure that the amount of adjusted gross income that they’re using for the IRMAA surcharges agrees with what they filed on their tax return two years ago,” Freitag said.

If the information does not match, you “absolutely need to file an appeal,” he said.

Because the IRMAA surcharges can be extremely significant, that is an area to watch for errors, Freitag said.

When to appeal your Medicare surcharges

If your income has gone down since your 2021 tax return, you can appeal your IRMAA.

That goes if you have been affected by a life changing event and your modified adjusted gross income has moved down a bracket or below the lowest amounts in the table.

Qualifying life changing events, according to the Social Security Administration, include marriage; divorce or annulment; death of a spouse; you or your spouse reduced your work hours or stopped working altogether; you or your spouse lost income on from property due to a disaster; you or your spouse experienced cessation, termination or reorganization of an employer’s pension plan; or you or your spouse received a settlement from an employer or former employer due to bankruptcy, closure or reorganization.

To report that change, beneficiaries need to fill out Form SSA-44 with appropriate documentation.

How higher benefits could cost you

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As your Social Security income goes up with the 8.7% COLA, that may also push your into a different IRMAA or tax bracket, Freitag noted.

That calls for careful monitoring of your income, he said.

Keep in mind that two years in the future you may get exposed to IRMAA issues if you’re not careful.

In addition, more of your Social Security benefits may be subject to income taxes. Up to 85% of Social Security income may be taxed based on a unique formula that also factors in other income.

It is a good idea to have taxes withheld from Social Security benefits in order to avoid a tax liability when you file your income tax returns, according to Marc Kiner, a CPA and co-founder of Premier Social Security Consulting.

“Do it as soon as you can,” Kiner said of filling out the voluntary withholding request form.

To better gauge how IRMAA or taxes on benefits may affect you going forward, it may help to consult a tax advisor or CPA who can help identify tax-efficient strategies, Freitag said.

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Social Security COLA will be 8.7% in 2023, highest increase in 40 years

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Amid record high inflation, Social Security beneficiaries will get an 8.7% increase to their benefits in 2023, the highest increase in 40 years.

The Social Security Administration announced the change on Thursday. It will result in a benefit increase of more than $140 more per month on average starting in January.

The average Social Security retiree benefit will increase $146 per month, to $1,827 in 2023, from $1,681 in 2022.

The Senior Citizens League, a non-partisan senior group, had estimated last month that the COLA could be 8.7% next year. 

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The confirmed 8.7% bump to benefits tops the 5.9% increase beneficiaries saw in 2022, which at the time was the highest in four decades.

The last time the cost-of-living adjustment was higher was in 1981, when the increase was 11.2%.

Next year’s record increase comes as beneficiaries have struggled with increasing prices this year.

“The COLAs really are about people treading water; they’re not increases in benefits,” said Dan Adcock, director of government relations and policy at the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare.

“They’re more trying to provide inflation protection so that people can maintain their standard of living,” Adcock said.

How much your Social Security check may be

Beneficiaries can expect to see the 2023 COLA in their benefit checks starting in January.

But starting in December, you may be able to see notices online from the Social Security Administration that state just how much your checks will be next year.

Two factors — Medicare Part B premiums and taxes — may influence the size of your benefit checks.

The standard Medicare Part B premium will be $5.20 lower next year — to $164.90, down from $170.10. Those payments are often deducted directly from Social Security benefit checks.

“That will mean that beneficiaries will be able to keep pretty much all or most of their COLA increase,” Mary Johnson, Social Security and Medicare policy analyst at The Senior Citizens League, told CNBC.com this week.

That may vary if you have money withheld from your monthly checks for taxes.

To gauge just how much more money you may see next year, take your net Social Security benefit and add in your Medicare premium and multiply that by the 2023 COLA.

“That will give you a good idea what your raise will be,” said Joe Elsasser, an Omaha, Nebraska-based certified financial planner and founder and president of Covisum, a provider of Social Security claiming software.

How the COLA is tied to inflation

The COLA applies to about 70 million Social Security and Supplemental Security Income beneficiaries.

The change is based on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, or CPI-W.

The Social Security Administration calculates the annual COLA by measuring the change in the CPI-W from the third quarter of the preceding year to the third quarter of the current year.

Benefits do not necessarily go up every year. While there was a record 5.8% increase in 2009, the following two years had 0% increases.

“For seniors, because they spend so much on health care, those years were difficult,” Adcock said.

A similar pattern may happen if the economy goes into a recession, according to Johnson.

What the COLA means if you haven’t claimed benefits yet

If you decide to claim Social Security benefits, you will get access to the record-high COLA.

But you will also have access to it if you wait to start your benefit checks at a later date, according to Elsasser.

If you’re 62 now and don’t claim, your benefit is adjusted by every COLA until you do.

The amount of the COLA really should not influence claiming.

Joe Elsasser

CFP and president of Covisum

What’s more, delaying benefits can increase the size of your monthly checks. Experts generally recommend most people wait as long as possible, until age 70, due to the fact that benefits increase 8% per year from your full retirement age (typically 66 or 67) to 70. To be sure, whether that strategy is ideal may vary based on other factors, such as your personal health situation and marital status.

“The amount of the COLA really should not influence claiming,” Elsasser said. “It doesn’t hurt you or help you as far as when you claim, because you’re going to get it either way.”

How a record-high increase may impact Social Security’s funds

Social Security’s trust funds can pay full benefits through 2035, the Social Security Board of Trustees said in June.

At that time, the program will be able to pay 80% of benefits, the board projects.

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The historic high COLA in 2023 could accelerate the depletion of the trust funds to at least one calendar year earlier, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

Higher wages may prompt workers to contribute more payroll taxes into the program, which may help offset that. In 2023, maximum taxable earnings will increase to $160,200, up from $147,000 this year.

What could happen to future benefit increases

While 2023 marks a record high COLA, beneficiaries should be prepared for future years where increases are not as high.

If inflation subsides, the size of COLAs will also go down.

Whether the CPI-W is the best measure for the annual increases is up for debate. Some tout the Consumer Price Index for the Elderly, or CPI-E, as a better measure for the costs seniors pay. Multiple Democratic congressional bills have called for changing the annual increases to that measure.

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Why this 68-year-old cancer patient cannot enroll in Medicare Part B

Scarlet Poulet (right), pictured with wife Nadine Kujawa, before Poulet was diagnosed with cancer in 2019.

Courtesy: Scarlet Poulet

Medicare’s rules for signing up have put 68-year-old Scarlet Poulet in an unenviable situation.

The New Orleans resident, who is recovering from cancer, has been enrolled in Medicare Part A (hospital coverage) since 2018 when she reached the eligibility age of 65. Yet due to how Medicare interacts with insurance through an employer — coverage she lost in August — Poulet is now not allowed to sign up for Part B (outpatient care) until January.

That’s when a three-month enrollment window opens for beneficiaries who didn’t enroll when they were supposed to. Even then, however, Poulet’s Part B coverage would not start until July due to Medicare rules — and she could face life-lasting late-enrollment penalties.

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“The rules surrounding Medicare eligibility, particularly as it relates to employer-based coverage, is unnecessarily complicated, with quite unfair results in some situations, like this one,” said David Lipschutz, associate director and senior policy attorney for the Center for Medicare Advocacy.

For most of Medicare’s 63.3 million beneficiaries, long delays before coverage begins or late enrollment penalties are not typical. However, for individuals who have insurance elsewhere when they reach age 65, mistakes in following the enrollment rules exactly can be problematic at best and costly at worst.

A bill that cleared Congress last year called the BENES Act fixes the type of seven-month lag Poulet faces between Part B enrollment and its start date, but it doesn’t take effect until 2023. At that point, coverage will begin the month after a person enrolls. 

However, the legislation does not specifically address the issue that led to Poulet’s predicament.

What went wrong 

In Poulet’s case, signing up for only Part A made sense at the time — she was covered through wife Nadine Kujawa’s workplace health plan. And, the rules allow beneficiaries to delay Part B without penalty if they have coverage elsewhere that Medicare considers acceptable.

The problem arose when Kujawa resigned from her job to care for Poulet — who was diagnosed with a rare head and neck cancer in 2019 — and the couple remained on Kujawa’s insurance as allowed under the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, or COBRA.

That law permits workers to stick with their health plan for up to 18 months (sometimes longer) when they leave a company, although they must cover the full cost of premiums instead of the employer chipping in.

Unfortunately, under Medicare rules, everything changes once the insurance is not related to active employment. It’s confusing and trips up a lot of people.

David Lipschutz

Associate director and senior policy attorney for the Center for Medicare Advocacy

While the work-based plan was suitable in lieu of Medicare Part B for Poulet while her wife was working, Kujawa’s separation from employment automatically rendered the coverage unacceptable.

“Unfortunately, under Medicare rules, everything changes once the insurance is not related to active employment,” Lipschutz said. “It’s confusing and trips up a lot of people.”

Unbeknownst to Poulet, at that point she had an eight-month window to sign up for Part B under Medicare rules to avoid late enrollment penalties.

In 2019, about 764,000 people paid the Part B late-enrollment penalty, according to congressional research. The penalty is 10% for every 12 months an individual should have been enrolled in Part B but was not.

Unaware of the rules, Poulet remained covered under COBRA until three months ago. She did not qualify for a special enrollment period for Medicare.

With no insurance for outpatient care, Poulet’s most recent cancer-related appointment cost $5,563 out of pocket. And that was after requesting financial relief from the original $7,974 price tag.

Poulet said her next step would be to request “equitable relief.” This basically involves asking the Social Security Administration to allow her to enroll in Part B immediately and eliminate late-enrollment penalties, although the request generally must involve proof that an agent of the government provided inaccurate information that led to the mistake.

There’s no guarantee the plea will work or how long a decision would take. Other federal rules prohibit Poulet from getting a health plan through the public marketplace. She also does not qualify for Medicaid, which places limits on how much income and savings a person can have.

“I lost my insurance, I have cancer, the pandemic is getting worse, and I’m supposed to wait until [July] to sign up?” Poulet said. “It’s like they’re saying you didn’t sign up for Part B so we’re gonna put you out to pasture and shoot you.”

The BENES Act — the legislation taking effect in 2023 that fixes some Medicare coverage delays — also authorizes the government to allow Part B special enrollment periods for “exceptional circumstances.” (This already exists for Part D prescription drug coverage and Part C Advantage Plans.)

The problem is not that COBRA coverage is available, it’s that there is not support for these transitions.

Casey Schwarz

Senior counsel for education and federal policy at the Medicare Rights Center

Exactly what will qualify at this point is uncertain. In other words, there’s no way of knowing whether the definition would include mistakes related to employer-based coverage, including COBRA.

Advocates say that when people find themselves in Poulet’s situation — unable to enroll and/or facing penalties — it generally is due to thinking they’re doing the right thing and there’s no one telling them otherwise.

“It’s especially hard in situations where people have been paying premiums for other insurance, especially under COBRA,” said Casey Schwarz, senior counsel for education and federal policy at the Medicare Rights Center.

“They say ‘clearly I wasn’t trying to game anything because I was paying more for premiums than I would have for Part B,'” Schwarz said.

Poulet and Kujawa’s premiums under COBRA were $1,686 monthly, compared with this year’s standard Medicare Part B premium of $148.50 a month ($170.10 next year).

One provision that did not make it into the BENES Act but is supported by advocates would require the government to notify individuals approaching Medicare eligibility about enrollment rules. 

“The problem is not that COBRA coverage is available, it’s that there is not support for these transitions,” Schwarz said.

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What to watch for if you’re joining a Medicare Advantage Plan

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For Medicare beneficiaries who want to join an Advantage Plan, now is the time to do it.

Just be sure you know what the plan covers and what your potential costs will be — and how long you have to change your mind.

During the annual fall open enrollment period, which is now underway and runs through Dec. 7, one of the things you can do is sign up for an Advantage Plan, as long as you have original Medicare (Part A hospital coverage and Part B outpatient care).

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While these plans continue growing in popularity and availability, there are some things to know.

“Not all will have the same benefits,” said Elizabeth Gavino, founder of Lewin & Gavino and an independent broker and general agent for Medicare plans. “You have to see what’s important to you.”

Roughly 63.3 million individuals get their health coverage through Medicare. The majority of them — 55.1 million — are age 65 or older, while the remainder are younger with permanent disabilities or individuals with end-stage renal disease.

Nearly 27 million beneficiaries get their Parts A and B benefits delivered through Advantage Plans, which are offered by private insurers and typically include Part D prescription drug coverage.

The remainder stick with original Medicare (Parts A and B). Those beneficiaries often pair that with a stand-alone Part D plan and a Medicare supplemental plan (aka Medigap), both of which also are offered by private insurance companies.

In addition to prescription drug coverage, many Advantage Plans offer benefits unavailable through original Medicare, which may include dental, vision, hearing, fitness programs, telemedicine, money for healthy food, personal household help or other extras. 

However, depending on the specifics of the plan, you may be limited to in-network doctors, hospitals and other providers. Or, if the plan does include coverage for treatment out-of-network, you may pay more for those visits.

Not all will have the same benefits. You have to see what’s important to you.

Elizabeth Gavino

Founder of Lewin & Gavino

“Check that your favorite providers and hospitals are in the network and that your medications are on the plan’s formulary,” said Danielle Roberts, co-founder of insurance firm Boomer Benefits.

And even if you find a plan with no premium, you’ll still generally be responsible for your Part B premium (which is forecast to rise to $158.50 in 2022 from $148.50 this year, although it has not been formally announced yet).

The average monthly premium for Advantage plans will be $19 next year, down from $21.22 in 2021, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Also keep in mind that the lower the premium, the more you’ll pay in cost-sharing, generally speaking. And the specifics of that — whether out-of-pocket limit, deductibles, copays or coinsurance — differ from plan to plan.

If you have a Medigap policy and you want to enroll in an Advantage Plan, you get a year to change your mind as long as this is the first time you’ve signed up for one, Roberts said.

“During that 12 months, you can dis-enroll from the Advantage plan, return to original Medicare and re-enroll in your same prior Medigap plan with no underwriting,” Roberts said.

Otherwise, trying to re-purchase Medigap beyond that could mean the insurance company deciding whether to insure you or not, based on your health. Generally, you only are guaranteed to qualify for a Medigap policy — regardless of pre-existing conditions — for six months when you first enroll in Medicare, unless your state has more flexible rules.

One aspect of coverage that can catch people by surprise is the hospitalization cost under an Advantage Plan, experts say. While original Medicare comes with a Part A deductible ($1,484 for 2021; estimated to be $1,556 for 2022) when you’re admitted to the hospital, there are no copays for the first 60 days of that inpatient care. In contrast, Advantage Plans often have a daily copay, which can result in a higher cost.

For a hospital stay of five days or more, at least half of Advantage enrollees would pay more than beneficiaries who have original Medicare, research from the Kaiser Family Foundation shows.

If you travel often, be aware that Advantage Plans may only cover you outside your local area for emergency medical treatment, not for routine visits.

“If you’re traveling, you may want a plan that has a broader network so you can travel around the country and have access to medical care that’s not an emergency,” said Gavino at Lewin & Gavino.

Also, separately from the rules applying to dropping Medigap to try out an Advantage Plan, there is an opportunity for all Advantage enrollees to change their mind about their choice made during open enrollment. That is, between Jan. 1 and March 31, you can switch to either another Advantage Plan or drop it in favor of original Medicare (and pick up a standalone Part D prescription drug plan).

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Most Medicare beneficiaries don’t compare options in open enrollment

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This is one of those times you may not want to follow the herd.

Most Medicare beneficiaries — 71% — do not explore their coverage options during open enrollment, according to a new Kaiser Family Foundation study. Because the specifics of health plans change from one year to the next, experts say this is a mistake.

“It can be a really unpleasant surprise for people who think they’re happy with their plan and then in January they have to confront the reality that their plan changed, which has an impact on their care or out-of-pocket costs,” said Juliette Cubanski, deputy director for the foundation’s program on Medicare policy.

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Medicare’s fall open enrollment period starts Friday and runs through Dec. 7. In simple terms, this annual window is for adding or changing coverage related to an Advantage Plan (Medicare Part C) and/or prescription drugs (Part D).

You can switch, add or drop those parts of your coverage, and changes go into effect Jan. 1. If you take no action, your 2021 plan generally would continue into 2022.

Fall open enrollment touches most beneficiaries in one way or another due to the coverage they select. For instance, of Medicare’s 63.3 million enrollees, 26.7 million choose to get their Part A (inpatient care) and Part B (outpatient care) benefits delivered through Advantage Plans, which are likely to include Part D.

The remainder stick with original Medicare (Parts A and B) and often pair it with a standalone Part D plan. Altogether, 48.5 million beneficiaries have prescription drug coverage through either an Advantage Plan or a standalone plan.

Among beneficiaries in Advantage Plans, 68% said they did do any comparisons, according to Kaiser’s research, which examined 2019 coverage choices. That compares with 73% of those in original Medicare.

Changes to your Advantage Plan could include adjustments to monthly premiums, copays, deductibles, coinsurance or the maximum out-of-pocket limit. Your drug coverage could change as well, as could doctors, hospitals and other providers that are considered in-network for your Advantage Plan.

If you discover after fall enrollment that the Advantage Plan you picked is not a good fit, you can change your coverage between Jan. 1 and March 31. You would be able to switch to either another Advantage Plan or to original Medicare and a stand-alone prescription plan.

However, you would be unable to switch from your standalone Part D plan to another during that early-year window.

The average monthly premium for Advantage plans will be $19 next year, down from $21.22 in 2021, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. The average 2022 monthly premium for Part D coverage will be $33, up from $31.47 this year.

Part B monthly premiums — as well as other various cost details — for 2022 have not been announced yet. However, the standard Part B premium is anticipated to rise to $158.50 from $148.50 this year, according to the latest Medicare trustees report.

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