Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only about 7 percent of Medicare beneficiaries pay those higher premiums. So you are (at least) in the richest 7 percent. Enjoy your financially secure retirement!
https://www.medicareresources.org/medicare-eligibility-and-enrollment/what-is-the-income-related-monthly-adjusted-amount-irmaa/#:~:text=Most%20Medicare%20beneficiaries%20do%20not,Part%20D%20prescription%20drug%20coverage.
I think the IRMAA is ridiculous considering that higher income earners contribute a very disproportionate share of total revenue during their working years. They already paid more into Medicare when they were working then they are charged more for it once they retire. It is a punitive and poorly designed tax for high income earners, that creates a situation where the marginal tax rate can exceed 100% if you are slightly above an income threshold.
Yes, it is just another tax on the wealthy and very unfair. We already paid our fair share. Infuriating.
+1
Yup! We have paid so much into Medicare, to have to pay $600/person+ for part B is ridiculous
What you paid in to Medicare from your wages over the last 40 years is Medicare Part A Hospital Insurance. That's why Part A is free.
Medicare Part B isn't free and you will have to spend 25% to 100% of the full cost of the insurance, depending on your income.
Most retiree health insurance provided by employers require that you enroll in Medicare A and B to keep your retiree coverage. That means the retiree coverage turns in to supplemental health insurance and is the secondary payer after Medicare. The only exception I can think of is the Federal Employee Health Benefits program which doesn't require retirees to enroll in Medicare A or B to keep their health insurance coverage. This is because the FEHB Program became law in 1960, which was five years before Medicare was created.
Having paid well over $800K into medicare (and employer doing the same) in our lifetimes, it's still ridiculous that we have to pay $1500+ per month for the rest of Medicare. For crappy coverage. We need universal healthcare and costs to be reduced, as healthcare shouldn't be for profit at the levels it is in the USA. I shouldn't be charged $1750 for "bloodwork" that my insurance only pays $150 for. Everyone should be billed $150 for that. Same for all procedures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For someone to pay $628.90/month in 2025 for Medicare premiums means they had MAGI between $410k and $750k two years ago. And that does not fully cover the cost of Medicare. What we should all actually be upset about is the cost of medical care in the US. Doesn't anyone else think it is insane that we pay so much more than other countries?
I'm rich and yes that bothers me.
We desperately need UHC, with the options for private care for those who choose to spend their $ on it. But Procedure X should cost everyone (in an area with similar cost of living--we must adjust for that) $Y. Not Y+1500 that insurance might reduce to Y or to Y+400 or Y+200.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For someone to pay $628.90/month in 2025 for Medicare premiums means they had MAGI between $410k and $750k two years ago. And that does not fully cover the cost of Medicare. What we should all actually be upset about is the cost of medical care in the US. Doesn't anyone else think it is insane that we pay so much more than other countries?
Because we have so much more dead weights, uneducated, and unproductive population.
No it’s because private healthcare increases the cost. Have to pay those CEO’s instead of spending money on treatments and doctor salaries.
Other first world countries spending on healthcare as percentage of GDP.
Japan 10.6%
UK 10.6%
Germany 12.6%
France 12.1%
Norway 8.1%
Canada 12.4%
US 18.1%
Health Insurance CEO pay does not explain a meaningful share of US healthcare spending. The current United healthcare CEO has a base salary of 1 million dollars with stock compensation of up to 60 million that vests after 3 years. So total annual compensation is around 21 million per year. United healthcare has around 52 million people covered by their insurance, which means that the CEO pay only accounts for 40.4 cents of health insurance costs per person. The average healthcare spending in the US is $14,570 which means that the CEO compensation accounts for less than $1/$34,000 in healthcare spending United healthcare insurance participants.
Anonymous wrote:For someone to pay $628.90/month in 2025 for Medicare premiums means they had MAGI between $410k and $750k two years ago. And that does not fully cover the cost of Medicare. What we should all actually be upset about is the cost of medical care in the US. Doesn't anyone else think it is insane that we pay so much more than other countries?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only about 7 percent of Medicare beneficiaries pay those higher premiums. So you are (at least) in the richest 7 percent. Enjoy your financially secure retirement!
https://www.medicareresources.org/medicare-eligibility-and-enrollment/what-is-the-income-related-monthly-adjusted-amount-irmaa/#:~:text=Most%20Medicare%20beneficiaries%20do%20not,Part%20D%20prescription%20drug%20coverage.
I think the IRMAA is ridiculous considering that higher income earners contribute a very disproportionate share of total revenue during their working years. They already paid more into Medicare when they were working then they are charged more for it once they retire. It is a punitive and poorly designed tax for high income earners, that creates a situation where the marginal tax rate can exceed 100% if you are slightly above an income threshold.
Yes, it is just another tax on the wealthy and very unfair. We already paid our fair share. Infuriating.
+1
Yup! We have paid so much into Medicare, to have to pay $600/person+ for part B is ridiculous
What you paid in to Medicare from your wages over the last 40 years is Medicare Part A Hospital Insurance. That's why Part A is free.
Medicare Part B isn't free and you will have to spend 25% to 100% of the full cost of the insurance, depending on your income.
Most retiree health insurance provided by employers require that you enroll in Medicare A and B to keep your retiree coverage. That means the retiree coverage turns in to supplemental health insurance and is the secondary payer after Medicare. The only exception I can think of is the Federal Employee Health Benefits program which doesn't require retirees to enroll in Medicare A or B to keep their health insurance coverage. This is because the FEHB Program became law in 1960, which was five years before Medicare was created.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For someone to pay $628.90/month in 2025 for Medicare premiums means they had MAGI between $410k and $750k two years ago. And that does not fully cover the cost of Medicare. What we should all actually be upset about is the cost of medical care in the US. Doesn't anyone else think it is insane that we pay so much more than other countries?
Because we have so much more dead weights, uneducated, and unproductive population.
No it’s because private healthcare increases the cost. Have to pay those CEO’s instead of spending money on treatments and doctor salaries.
Other first world countries spending on healthcare as percentage of GDP.
Japan 10.6%
UK 10.6%
Germany 12.6%
France 12.1%
Norway 8.1%
Canada 12.4%
US 18.1%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For someone to pay $628.90/month in 2025 for Medicare premiums means they had MAGI between $410k and $750k two years ago. And that does not fully cover the cost of Medicare. What we should all actually be upset about is the cost of medical care in the US. Doesn't anyone else think it is insane that we pay so much more than other countries?
Because we have so much more dead weights, uneducated, and unproductive population.
Anonymous wrote:Yea even though I’m 47, we’ve had a HDHP and have been maxing out or HSA for year. Will come in quite handy for A, B, and D premiums. Though it doesn’t cover G we have hoarded thousands and thousands in receipts we can just get reimbursement from.
If you are high income you are foolish to have not built up your HSA over the years. We are sitting on 250k in HSA funds alone. triple tax advantaged. we will at least have 500k in that account when we need medicare and that’s conservative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is your choice to get Medicare. It is optional.
The fact you are used to free medical insurance is highly unusual. And it sounds like you (personally) were not even working fur that very valuable perk.
Who was paying for you and your husband’s health care at that time? (Lower level employees in the company? Investors? Customers?)
Sorry, but you get zero sympathy here.
OP's expected come back... "We are rich, we don't need your sympathy."
OP here. Thanks...that was on target!!
Anonymous wrote:For someone to pay $628.90/month in 2025 for Medicare premiums means they had MAGI between $410k and $750k two years ago. And that does not fully cover the cost of Medicare. What we should all actually be upset about is the cost of medical care in the US. Doesn't anyone else think it is insane that we pay so much more than other countries?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is your choice to get Medicare. It is optional.
The fact you are used to free medical insurance is highly unusual. And it sounds like you (personally) were not even working fur that very valuable perk.
Who was paying for you and your husband’s health care at that time? (Lower level employees in the company? Investors? Customers?)
Sorry, but you get zero sympathy here.
OP's expected come back... "We are rich, we don't need your sympathy."
OP here. Thanks...that was on target!!