8 Tips for Paying for Health Care in Retirement

With retiree benefits vanishing, there's even more reason to save for future medical costs

March 16, 2009 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment (21)

[See Most Medicare Part D Enrollees Don’t Choose the Lowest Cost Drug Plan ]

Consider working longer. Many economists think most people should plan to work well past the current average retirement age, 63, in part to help finance health expenses. Working longer allows you to funnel extra cash into your nest egg, gives your investments more time to recover from recent market losses, and cuts the length of time your retirement stash needs to last. Workers age 50 and older can deposit up to $22,000 in a traditional tax-deferred 401(k) this year, up $1,500 from 2008. Social Security benefits also increase for each year you delay claiming benefits up until age 70. "People simply can't afford to cover their future health-care costs unless they have more assets, and people are responding to that by working longer," says Richard Johnson, an Urban Institute researcher. There is some evidence that continuing to work at a challenging--but not stressful--job or staying active and engaged by volunteering or taking up hobbies can help you stay healthy even longer. "Mental and physical exercise improve overall brain fitness," says Gene Cohen, director of the Center on Aging, Health, and Humanities at George Washington University. "Mastery and a sense of accomplishment can improve mental fitness by boosting the immune system."

[See the 20 Fastest-Growing Jobs for Aging Boomers]

Factor in long-term care. What's often the greatest retiree medical expense of all--long-term care—generally isn't covered by Medicare. Last year, a private nursing home room cost an average of $76,460 a year, or $209 per day, according to a Genworth Financial survey. Costs vary considerably by state, and range from an average of $125 a day in Louisiana to $515 in Alaska. More inexpensive options are available, but even they could torpedo most retirees' budgets. The average rate for a home-health aide is $19 an hour. That comes to $43,884 per year for 44 hours a week of care. A private one-bedroom unit in an assisted-living facility typically costs $36,090 annually. And the most frugal long-term care option, adult day care, still runs $15,236 per year, on average, for care five days a week, Genworth Financial found.

Consider long-term care insurance...carefully. Long-term-care insurance can help protect you from some of these catastrophic costs--at a hefty price. AARP estimates that a 65-year-old in good health can expect to pay between $2,000 and $3,000 a year for a policy that covers nursing-home and home care. And Fidelity Investments calculated that a couple, both 65 in 2008, would need $85,000 just to insure against a lifetime of long-term-care expenses. Before you buy long-term care insurance, you should get answers to plenty of questions: how to cancel the policy; what happens if you stop paying the premiums; how many times you can renew; how long coverage lasts; what the maximum payout is (and whether it is indexed for inflation); and what needs to happen before you can begin claiming your benefits. "These policies are written stating very extensively what they will cover, and 20 years later when you start using long-term-care services, there may be some new modality of service that is not covered by your plan," cautions Johnson. You can check up on the financial health of insurers at A.M. Best, Moody's, or Standard & Poor's and with your state insurance department.

[See Can You Afford Long-Term-Care Insurance?]

Tags:
healthcare,
retirement

Reader Comments Read all comments (21)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

I found a great video series about this subject. It asks people how it would impact their lives if thier parents lost their healthcare benefits and then takes it a step further asking how it would impact them if their parents had to MOVE IN with them because they lost their healthcare. Check it out:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4kFwxmD3P4&feature=channel_video_title

Katie of NY 10:48AM December 05, 2011

I was wondering if there is any way a retired peson can pay their medical

insurance and medical bills with pretax dollars.

It does'nt seem rigt that it should only be available to people who are

still employed.

Kevin McGuire of MN 2:44PM November 03, 2011

Reading these repsonses I can't imagine living with your health-care "system"! Our National Medicare system that covers everyone is not perfect in many ways. It does not cover drugs, eyeglasses, physiotherapy (unless in a hospital setting), etc. You cannot just call up a specialist for diagnosis or opinion without your family doc's referral and often the wait may be many months. However, EVERYONE has equal coverage for physician and hospital treatment of serious illnesses and life-threatening diseases. We can also buy private health insurance with additional benefits (private room in a hospital, drugs, eyeglasses, etc.). It is high time the USA had a way to provide medical care for all its citizens.

vivian 12:29AM March 15, 2010

advertisement

Latest Video

advertisement

How to Live to 100

Why do some people live long, healthy, and happy lives, while others struggle with dementia, heart disease, and depression? Learn how to protect yourself from those outcomes based on the latest research on health, longevity, happiness, and finances in the U.S. News ebook.