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Wife’s Medicare bill we received is $845.00
Posted by: Microman
Date: May 29, 2022 01:34PM
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Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Speedy
Date: May 29, 2022 01:48PM
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Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: PeterW
Date: May 29, 2022 01:49PM
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Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Speedy
Date: May 29, 2022 02:04PM
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Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Michael
Date: May 29, 2022 02:49PM
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Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: kap
Date: May 29, 2022 08:33PM
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What fresh hell! I am not looking forward to this type of retirement any time soon :-[Quote
Michael
What the others said. It seems very likely she's gotten a bill for Jan-May, 2022.
Unless you made boodles of money in 2020. Then you're subject to IRMAA (Income Related Monthly Adjustment Amount) for Medicare Parts B and D. I can't make the math work for the $845 with IRMAA, but if you and your wife made $750,000 in 2020, your IRMAA Part B would be $578.30 each per month. And you'd have a Part D IRMAA of $77.90 (plus your Part D cost). IRMAA starts at $182,000 of joint income. So, if your family income was less than $182,000 in 2020, it's not going to be IRMAA
Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Speedy
Date: May 29, 2022 09:22PM
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Quote
kap
What fresh hell! I am not looking forward to this type of retirement any time soon
Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Diana
Date: May 30, 2022 01:19AM
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Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Speedy
Date: May 30, 2022 04:53AM
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Diana
Speedy,
I have an HSA through work, and I’m not yet old enough for Medicare. When you say that when you have Medicare, do you mean when you get old enough (I’m 61 now) or when you apply for and get approved for Medicare? I’ve been actively trying to ignore the getting older part …
I’ve been maximizing it every year, just because.
Diana
Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Michael
Date: May 30, 2022 06:00AM
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Quote
Speedy
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Diana
Speedy,
I have an HSA through work, and I’m not yet old enough for Medicare. When you say that when you have Medicare, do you mean when you get old enough (I’m 61 now) or when you apply for and get approved for Medicare? I’ve been actively trying to ignore the getting older part …
I’ve been maximizing it every year, just because.
Diana
SSA doesn’t allow a person to open or contribute to an existing HSA once you are enrolled in Medicare. Any funds in an existing HSA can continue to be spent while on Medicare as before until the HSA is depleted. If a person is 65 or older and not enrolled in Medicare they can open or contribute to an HSA.
Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Speedy
Date: May 30, 2022 05:55PM
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Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Michael
Date: May 30, 2022 08:02PM
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Speedy
“paying for/getting reimbursed for Medicare Part B/D and so on through your HSA.”
I thought you were not allowed to use an HSA to pay your Medicare premiums?
That other stuff is interesting. I ignored my involuntary enrollment in Part A and continued to contribute to the HSA. I suspect the IRS is too backed up to care and the HSA is in my wife’s name/SS#. That six month look-back provision could be a problem, though.
Re: Wife’s Medicare bill got $845.00
Posted by: Speedy
Date: May 31, 2022 05:35AM
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