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.