quote:
Originally posted by m1009:
Thank you for the info. I’m about 2 years from Medicare, and still working full time. Haven’t decided if I will also retire then or not, depends on my job duties. If they stay about the same, might keep working, but boy I am tired of the rat race.
If you're two years away from 65 and tired of the rat race, here's a strategy you might want to consider. You can get the best health insurance plans for little to nothing. You just need to be able to limit your income to between 138% and 150% of the Federal Poverty Level for the number of people in your household. For example, for 2023 and 2 people, your income has to be between $25,268 and $27,465 and you will get the best healthcare insurance for free. That's like zero copays for doctor visits and prescriptions with just $500 deductible for the whole year. Below the limit and you'll be forced into Medicaid. As you go above 150% of the FPL, your expected premium contribution goes up. For the same 2 people at 300% FPL ($54,930), your premium contribution goes up to 6% of what your income is. Above 400% FPL, your premiums is limited to 8.5% of your annual income.
How can you live on just $25,268 for a whole year just to qualify for free healthcare? You don't. This means you have cash outside or a Roth IRA that you can tap without triggering income that you have to report on your taxes. To apply, go to healthcare.gov. If your state has it's own program, it will have a link in healthcare.gov. To maximize your cash flow, you would quit early in the year before you earn more than the poverty level / subsidy you're shooting for including any income you are projected to earn for the rest of the year.
When you apply, you would simply submit a letter that you upload that states what you expect to earn for the year (which would be just a $1 below the 150% FPL level which qualifies you for zero premiums instead of submitting your tax returns. Just understand that if you exceed your FPL target even by just one dollar, you revert to the next lower subsidy level and may have to pay back part of your healthcare subsidy as part of your tax return.
Here's a link that gives the FPL numbers
Link I used to use the California table as it's a lot easier to understand but this works just as well. You just need to google each year you'll be on Obamacare to know what the new income targets are.
"It did not really matter what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us. We needed to stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of ourselves as those who were being questioned by life – daily and hourly. Our answer must consist not in talk and meditation, but in right action and in right conduct. Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual." Viktor Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning, 1946.