Healthcare costs eat into Social Security checks

Healthcare is draining Social Security checks, and the pressure is getting worse.

Out-of-pocket expenses for health care in retirement are more than people plan for. Even including Medicare coverage and ignoring long-term care, retirees face substantial out-of-pocket costs for premiums, co-pays and uncovered medical services.

Those bills eat up about a third of the average retiree’s Social Security income and nearly a quarter of their total income, according to a new report from the Center on Retirement at Boston College.

“Retirees are getting it because they’re writing the checks now, but those approaching retirement need to realize that this is coming,” Matthew Rutledge, economist and author of the report, told Yahoo Finance. “It’s a rude awakening for people once they get to retirement.”

For about half of seniors, monthly Social Security benefits provide at least 50% of their income, and for about 1 in 4 seniors, it provides at least 90% of their income. For 27% — 6.4 million seniors — it is their only source of income.

In January, the average monthly estimated Social Security retirement benefit was $2,071, according to data from the Social Security Administration.

For women, those checks tend to be smaller. A woman’s average monthly Social Security check is about a quarter smaller than the average man’s due, in part, to lower pay over years of work, time off the workforce for caregiving, and more part-time work.

The bad news is that health care costs are not going down.

“Going forward, we’re going to see a lot of people’s Social Security checks go toward medical costs,” Rutledge said. “The picture is not going to improve any time soon.”

Even basic health care in early retirement is expensive. “Medicare premiums have grown quite a lot, much faster than inflation in recent years,” Rutledge said.

Medical inflation is projected to increase by more than twice Social Security’s cost-of-living adjustments. · MoMo Productions via Getty Images

In 2026, for example, the monthly premium rate for Part B is $202.90, an increase of $17.90 from last year. And the annual Part B deductible, which most people must pay before their Medicare coverage begins, rose $26 this year to $283.

In addition, medical inflation is projected to grow at more than double the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) rate.

Health-related cost inflation is expected to remain high, with a projected long-term inflation rate of 5.8 percent (based on a 65-year-old couple retiring in 2026 with average health care costs and national averages), according to a new report from data firm HealthView Services. The Social Security COLA is projected to increase by just 2.4%.

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