Healthcare is the most unpredictable and often underestimated expense in retirement. Unlike food or housing, the cost of staying healthy rises 5–6% per year and increasingly depends on factors you can’t control. Understanding what you’ll actually pay — and planning for it — is one of the most important financial decisions you’ll make.
Total Lifetime Healthcare Costs in Retirement
| Source | Estimate (Per Couple, 20-Year Retirement) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fidelity Benefits Institute (2026) | $165,000 | Premiums + out-of-pocket; excludes LTC |
| HealthView Services | $315,000 | Includes projected premium increases |
| Employee Benefit Research Institute | ~$296,000 (90th percentile) | Wide distribution based on health |
| Long-term care costs (if needed) | $100,000–$500,000+ additional | 70% of 65-year-olds will need some LTC |
Key insight: These numbers assume Medicare coverage. Without coverage, or for those who retire before 65, costs are dramatically higher.
Annual Healthcare Budget: Married Couple (Both Age 65, 2026)
| Expense | Annual Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Medicare Part B premiums (2 people) | $4,440 | $185/mo each; IRMAA surcharges if income >$212K/couple |
| Medigap Plan G premiums (2 people) | $4,200–$6,000 | ~$175–$250/mo each at age 65 |
| Medicare Part D premiums (2 plans) | $840–$2,400 | $35–$100/mo per plan |
| Part D out-of-pocket (copays, drugs) | $500–$2,000 | Depends on medications |
| Dental (routine + occasional work) | $1,500–$5,000 | Medicare doesn’t cover; dentists not in Medicare system |
| Vision (exams + glasses/contacts) | $400–$1,200 | Limited Medicare coverage |
| Hearing aids | $1,000–$2,000 | Amortized over 5-year lifespan ($5K–$10K per pair) |
| Part B deductible ($257 each, 2026) | $514 | Annual; Medigap Plan G covers after deductible year 1 |
| Other copays and OTP expenses | $500–$2,000 | |
| Total annual estimate | $14,000–$25,000 | Per couple |
Medicare Premium Increases Over Time
Medicare Part B premiums have risen an average of 5.5% per year over the past decade. Budget for that trajectory:
| Year | Projected Part B Premium | Per Couple (Annual) |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $185/month | $4,440 |
| 2030 | ~$230/month | ~$5,520 |
| 2035 | ~$295/month | ~$7,080 |
| 2040 | ~$380/month | ~$9,120 |
IRMAA: The High-Income Medicare Surcharge
Higher-income retirees pay surcharges on Medicare Part B and D:
| 2026 Individual Income | 2026 Joint Income | Part B Premium | Part D Surcharge |
|---|---|---|---|
| ≤$106,000 | ≤$212,000 | $185.00/mo | $0 |
| $106,001–$133,000 | $212,001–$266,000 | $259.00/mo | $13.70/mo |
| $133,001–$167,000 | $266,001–$334,000 | $370.00/mo | $35.30/mo |
| $167,001–$200,000 | $334,001–$400,000 | $480.90/mo | $57.00/mo |
| $200,001–$500,000 | $400,001–$750,000 | $591.90/mo | $78.60/mo |
| >$500,000 | >$750,000 | $628.90/mo | $85.80/mo |
Note: IRMAA uses income from 2 years prior. Roth conversions, home sales, and RMDs can push you into surcharge tiers unexpectedly.
Pre-Medicare Healthcare (Retiring Before 65)
If you retire before Medicare eligibility at 65, you’ll need to bridge coverage:
| Option | Monthly Cost (Individual) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| COBRA | $600–$1,800 | Typically available 18–36 months; expensive |
| ACA Marketplace plan | $400–$1,500+ | Subsidies available if income is under 400% FPL |
| Spouse’s employer plan | Depends on plan | Often cheapest option if available |
| Short-term health insurance | $100–$400 | Limited coverage; not ACA-compliant; gaps in benefits |
| Healthcare sharing ministry | $200–$500 | Not insurance; limited protection |
ACA opportunity: If you manage income strategically (keeping MAGI under 400% of Federal Poverty Level ≈ $62,000 individual in 2026), you may qualify for significant ACA premium subsidies during your bridge years.
Major Healthcare Cost Wildcards
| Scenario | Potential Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Long-term care facility (nursing home) | $85,000–$120,000/year | 2026 national average; wide regional variation |
| Assisted living | $40,000–$75,000/year | Lower than nursing home; growing segment |
| Home health aide (40 hrs/week) | $30,000–$55,000/year | Many prefer home care; not covered by Medicare long-term |
| Memory care | $55,000–$90,000/year | Specialized Alzheimer’s/dementia care |
| Hip replacement (out-of-pocket with Medicare) | $1,000–$3,500 | Part A deductible + skilled nursing |
| Cancer treatment (out-of-pocket annual maximum) | $7,050–$8,000 | Medicare out-of-pocket cap varies |
| Dental implants (2 teeth) | $4,000–$8,000 | Not covered by Medicare |
Strategies to Reduce Healthcare Costs in Retirement
| Strategy | Estimated Savings | How |
|---|---|---|
| Choose Medigap vs. Advantage based on health | $5,000–$30,000 over retirement | Advantage is cheaper upfront but more expensive for serious illness |
| Stay healthy (exercise, diet, not smoking) | Tens of thousands over lifetime | Reduces premiums and care utilization |
| Generic drugs vs. brand name | $500–$3,000/year | Ask doctor and pharmacist at every prescription |
| Use preventive care (100% covered by Medicare) | Variable | Annual wellness visits, screenings, vaccines — fully covered |
| Keep income below IRMAA thresholds | $900–$10,700/year | Strategic Roth conversions and withdrawal timing |
| Fund HSA before Medicare enrollment | $23,150 tax-free (2026, family) | Must stop contributing at Medicare enrollment |
| Negotiate dental costs or use dental schools | 30–60% savings on procedures | Dental school clinics provide professional care at reduced rates |
Long-Term Care Insurance
| Age at Purchase | Annual Premium (Good Health) | Benefit Period |
|---|---|---|
| 55 | $1,500–$3,000/year | 3–5 years coverage |
| 60 | $2,000–$4,500/year | 3–5 years coverage |
| 65 | $2,800–$6,000/year | 3–5 years coverage |
| 70 | $4,000–$8,500/year (if insurable) | 3–5 years coverage |
Hybrid LTC policies (LTC insurance combined with life insurance) are increasingly popular — you get LTC benefits if needed, or the death benefit to heirs if not. Premiums are level, not subject to rate increases like traditional LTC.