The post What Happens When Medicare Premiums Are No Longer Your Problem? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Medicare is not free, and the bill arrives every month for the rest of your life. The standard Part B premium in 2026 is $202.90 per month, which works out to roughly $2,435 a year per enrollee. Add Part D, a Medigap policy, and the occasional out-of-pocket charge, and most retirees end up writing checks closer to $5,000 a year per person for healthcare coverage they already “earned.”
How much capital, parked in income-producing investments, would cover that bill forever without touching principal?
Retirees pay off mortgages. They sell the second car. Commuting costs vanish. Medicare premiums do not. They are deducted directly from Social Security, they rise almost every year, and they continue until death. The 2026 Part B premium jumped $17.90 from $185.00 in 2025, a roughly 10% increase in a single year, while the 2026 Social Security COLA came in at 2.8%. Healthcare inflation eats COLA for breakfast.
Using a $5,000 annual target (Part B plus Part D plus a modest Medigap plan), here is what the principal looks like:
Medicare premiums rarely feel expensive because they arrive a little at a time. Yet eliminating a $5,000 annual healthcare bill frees up money for things people actually notice. It can fund weekend trips, holiday travel, charitable giving, birthday gifts for grandchildren, dining out, hobbies, or the property tax bill on a paid-off home. Retirement often improves one recurring expense at a time, and Medicare is one of the largest recurring expenses most households face.
Compare two portfolios sized to throw off $5,000 today.
Portfolio A: $143,000 at 3.5% yield, growing the payout 7% a year. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) is the archetype, with 70 consecutive annual increases and a history reaching back to 1890. In ten years that $5,000 stream becomes roughly $9,800. In twenty, around $19,300.
Portfolio B: $50,000 at 10% yield, flat. Year one and year twenty both pay $5,000. Meanwhile, CPI has been running at roughly 0.5% a month, and healthcare inflation typically outpaces headline CPI. The bill keeps climbing while the check does not.
Part D adds another $40 to $70 a month for most enrollees, Medigap plans run $150 to $250, and the $283 Part B deductible resets every January. High earners with modified adjusted gross income above $109,000 individual or $218,000 joint pay IRMAA surcharges on top. A growing income stream that starts by covering Part B will, ten years out, cover most of the rest.
Earmarking six figures for Medicare premiums is the wrong call if you are 82 with limited assets, if you have higher-yield debt to retire, or if you need the cash for an upcoming surgery, a roof, or long-term care. Dedicated income portfolios reward time. Without it, the math does not pencil.
Many retirees think of retirement income as one giant number. In practice, it is often easier to think in smaller pieces. First cover Medicare. Then utilities. Then property taxes. Over time, the portfolio stops feeling like an account balance and starts feeling like a quiet bill-paying machine.
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The post What Happens When Medicare Premiums Are No Longer Your Problem? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


