Cornhusker
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- Location
- Nebraska Panhandle
I will only be taking in about $2100 from SS, but when I do retire, I'll have everything paid for, so I won't have to worry about rent or car payments, at least for a while.
Doesn't IRMAA only go back 2 years?What gets me is Medicare which is basing my IRMAA portion on my fat rat earnings years not 2024. B12 injections are my only medication.
As far as I figured out - yes. Two years of IRMAA based on me and until SO retires.Doesn't IRMAA only go back 2 years?
I get that, but Medicare is supposed to be a progressive insurance arrangement, i.e. more help for the buck to low earners.As far as I figured out - yes. Two years of IRMAA based on me and until SO retires.
My, call it gripe, is that I need no medical services/medication. My B12 shots are $64.
iirma is certainly graduated in increases by incomeThe big problem with IRMAA are the cliff-like steps. Go over the income limit by $1 and you may pay $1,000 more for your Medicare. Go over to same income limit by $12,000 and you still pay $1000 more. It should be more like our income tax with graduated increases as one income goes up.
ss is means tested in other ways too ….I don’t mind paying taxes but I do mind paying taxes on my Social Security benefits.
Taxing Social Security is a subtle form of means testing.
I would prefer that Social Security be exempt from taxes even if it means increasing the tax rate on my other income.
I realize that the end result would be the same but it’s more about principle than money for me.
The good news is that the tax on Social Security goes to help prop up Medicare.
I've been doing it for years okay. Now I bring in around $1300 and even managing to save money. I just adjusted my lifestyle and got rid of things I could do without or find cheaper alternatives. After I pay my rent and bills, I'm still able to set aside maybe $180 a month. Not much, but it helps. I also don't have a lot of credit card debt.Met a gentleman yesterday who wants to rent a house. He told me his social security is 950/mth. How can he ever ever eat? Anyone else living only on ss? How???
many who live on ss alone effectively aren’t living on ss alone .Met a gentleman yesterday who wants to rent a house. He told me his social security is 950/mth. How can he ever ever eat? Anyone else living only on ss? How???
I could buy a damn nice tent and shopping cart for 10-15k, and have money left over to invest.many who live on ss alone effectively aren’t living on ss alone .
many get health insurance help or medicaid.. here in our city they can get utility bill assistance, free transportation , free meals delivered , possibly never ever a rent increase if on the SCRIE assistance program here .
so effectively they can have an effective income ahead of someone earning 10-15k more
I just get social security and VA healthcare. Nothing else and I'm okay.many who live on ss alone effectively aren’t living on ss alone .
many get health insurance help or medicaid.. here in our city they can get utility bill assistance, free transportation , free meals delivered , possibly never ever a rent increase if on the SCRIE assistance program here .
so effectively they can have an effective income ahead of someone earning 10-15k more
That's what those pushing for repeal of WEP/GPO are after. They want their greedy mitts on those low-earners' benefits.ss is means tested in other ways too ….
the lowest earners get 6x the benefit that the highest earners get ,per dollar paid in
The incoming administration wants to make cuts to Medicare and Social Security. What will people live on? Health insurance alone cost a fortune.
Spousal benefits are 50% IF one has no benefits of their own and IF you have been married 10 continuous years; and IF you do not remarry before age 60; and IF spouse who earns more dies before you do.The deal with SS is. if you don't pay in, you don't collect against your own earnings. It isn't intended as welfare. Spousal benefits are 50%, not a bad deal for the situation you describe.
Like most women in my age group (now early 70s), I worked part-time from the age of 16, then full-time starting in my early 20s. Continued that until having children, then stayed home raising them for 10 years. Moved to part time work as they got older and transitioned to full-time. At 65 I went back to part-time work.
Most Americans have a 50-ish year work span (16-68). Choosing to stop while children are young might take 20 years, at most.
Despite a ten year gap, so far I've worked (and paid into SS) for 42 years.
It would be cuts for those in the future coming ON to SS/Medicare, not those already ON benefits.The incoming administration wants to make cuts to Medicare and Social Security. What will people live on? Health insurance alone cost a fortune.
That is no cuts and changes to those ALREADY retired and ON SS. They can and will, and MUST make changes for those coming onto SS, say by 2030. The most likely and first change will be the amount those working will be contributing to the funds.Sounds like partisan hokum.
How Trump Could Affect Social Security And Medicare—Group Warns Funds Could Run Out In 6 Years Under His Plans
Trump and the Republican Party publicly committed ahead of the election not to cut Social Security or Medicare if Trump won the White House, with the GOP’s platform stating the party will “fight for and protect Social Security and Medicare with no cuts, including no changes to the retirement age.”
It is only the two years before you start paying Part B.Doesn't IRMAA only go back 2 years?
Maybe I misunderstand you, but I think that's incorrect.It is only the two years before you start paying Part B.
Er, isn't it really more costly supporting the "healthy" who live unnaturally long lives today?I also think anyone who isn't at a healthy body weight, who smokes, ...
Ah. Maybe so...guess I will know if I ever come close.Maybe I misunderstand you, but I think that's incorrect.
You get re-evaluated each tax year for IRMAA as far as I can determine, not just when you go on Medicare.