Watch out — Decisions you make on your 2021 tax return can affect your future Medicare health insurance premiums

Watch out — Decisions you make on your 2021 tax return can affect your future Medicare health insurance premiums

Medicare health insurance premiums can add up to major bucks — especially if you’re upper-income, married, and both you and your spouse are paying. This column lists the 2022 Medicare health insurance premium amounts, explains why decisions made on your 2021 Form 1040 will determine your premiums for 2023, and more. Here goes.    Medicare Part B coverage is commonly called Medicare medical insurance or original Medicare. Part B mainly covers doctors and outpatient services, and Medicare-eligible individuals must pay monthly premiums for this benefit. 
The monthly premium for the current year depends on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI), as reported on your Form 1040 for two years earlier. MAGI means the adjusted gross income (AGI) number shown on your Form 1040 plus any tax-exempt interest income.  Your 2023 premiums depend on your 2021 MAGI, as reported on your 2021 Form 1040, which you may not have filed yet. That means that things you do or don’t do on that return can impact your 2023 premiums. This is especially true if you’re self-employed or an owner of a pass-through business entity (LLC, partnership, or S corporation).  2022 Part B premiums   For 2022, most individuals will pay the base Part B premium of $170.10 per covered person ($2,041.20 if you pay premiums for the full year).  Higher-income individuals must pay a surcharge on top of the base premium for Part B coverage. For 2022, surcharges apply if you: (1) filed as a single for 2020 and reported MAGI for that year in excess of $91,000 or (2) filed jointly for 2020 and reported MAGI for that year in excess of $182,000. The Feds call the surcharge an Income Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA), but we will call it what it is: a surcharge. For 2022, Part B monthly premiums, including surcharges if applicable, for each covered individual are as follows. See more info here. * The $170.10 base premium with no surcharge ($2,041.20 if you pay premiums for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was no more than $91,000 and you filed as a single for that year or no more than $182,000 if you filed a joint return. * $238.10 ($2,857.20 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $91,001 and $114,000 and you filed as a single or between $182,001 and $228,000 if you filed a joint return.  * $340.20 ($4,082.40 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $114,001 and $142,000 and you filed as a single or between $228,001 and $284,000 if you filed a joint return.    * $442.30 ($5,307.60 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $142,001 and $170,000 and you filed as a single or between $284,001 and $340,000 if you filed a joint return.    * $544.30 ($6,531.60 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $170,001 and $500,000 and you filed as a single or between $340,001 and $750,000 if you filed a joint return.    * The maximum of $578.30 ($6,939.60 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was above $500,000 and you filed as a single or above $750,000 if you filed a joint return. Key point: The 2022 premiums are significantly higher than the 2021 amounts. We don’t yet know the numbers for 2023, but they will probably be considerably higher than the 2022 amounts. Ugh. Paying Part B premiums  Part B premiums, including any surcharge, are withheld from your Social Security benefit payments and are shown on the annual Form SSA-1099 sent to you by the Social Security Administration (SSA). Premiums for Medicare Advantage coverage (Medicare Part C)  You can get your Medicare Part B benefits through the government, for the monthly premium costs listed above, or you can get your benefits through a so-called Medicare Advantage plan offered by a private insurance company that contracts with Medicare to provide benefits under rules established by Medicare. Medicare Advantage plans are also sometimes called Medicare Part C.  Medicare Advantage basics  When you sign up for a Medicare Advantage plan, you still must pay the standard Part B premium, including any applicable surcharge for higher-income folks, and you still get the standard Part B coverage. The advantage is that the Medicare Advantage plan will deliver benefits beyond what the government gives you under Part B, such as prescription drug coverage, dental care, and vision care. You may be charged an additional monthly premium for the Medicare Advantage plan, but depending on where you live, some plans don’t charge anything extra. The additional premium, if any, depends on the plan you select and where you live. With a Medicare Advantage plan, you are usually limited to a defined provider network, which you may view as a disadvantage.   Paying Medicare Advantage premiums  When you have a Medicare Advantage plan, the standard Part B premiums, including any surcharge for higher-income folks, will still be withheld from your Social Security benefit payments and will still be shown on the annual Form SSA-1099 sent to you by the SSA. If you pay an extra premium for your Medicare Advantage coverage, you can pay it like any other bill or arrange to have it withheld from your Social Security benefit payments. Most people choose the first option because it avoids bureaucracy. Premiums for Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage Medicare Part D premiums are for private prescription drug coverage. Base premiums vary depending on the plan. Higher-income individuals must pay a surcharge on top of the base premium. For 2022, surcharges apply to individuals who: (1) filed as singles for 2020 and reported MAGI for that year in excess of $91,000 or (2) filed joint returns for 2020 and reported MAGI in excess of $182,000. The 2022 monthly Part D surcharges for each covered person are as follows, according to the Medicare website. * Zero if your 2020 MAGI was no more than $91,000 and you filed as a single for that year or no more than $182,000 if you filed a joint return. * $12.40 ($148.80 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $91,001 and $114,000 and you filed as a single or between $182,001 and $228,000 if you filed a joint return.  * $32.10 ($385.20 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $114,001 and $142,000 and you filed as a single or between $228,001 and $284,000 if you filed a joint return.    * $51.70 ($620.40 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $142,001 and $170,000 and you filed as a single or between $284,001 and $340,000 if you filed a joint return.    * $71.30 ($855.60 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was between $170,001 and $500,000 and you filed as a single or between $340,001 and $750,000 if you filed a joint return.    * The maximum of $77.90 ($934.80 for the full year) if your 2020 MAGI was above $500,000 and you filed as a single or above $750,000 if you filed a joint return. Key point: The 2022 surcharges are barely above the 2021 amounts. Good. We don’t yet know the numbers for 2023, but we can hope for more good news. Fingers crossed. Paying Part D premiums  You pay the base Part D premium, which depends on the private insurance company plan that you select, to the insurance company. Any surcharge,will be withheld from your Social Security benefit payments and reflected on the annual Form SSA-1099 sent to you by the SSA.  Impact of decisions made on your 2021 Form 1040  Decisions made on your 2021 Form 1040 can affect your 2021 MAGI and, in turn, your 2023 Medicare health insurance premiums. If you’re self-employed or an owner of a pass-through business entity, you have more ways to micromanage your MAGI. For instance: * Until the due date for your 2021 Form 1040 (10/17/22 if you get an extension), you as a self-employed individual can make a bigger or smaller deductible contribution to your self-employed retirement account for the 2021 tax year. Your choice will impact your 2021 MAGI and, in turn, your 2023 Medicare health insurance premiums.  * You as an owner of a pass-through business entity can (along with the other owners, if applicable) make other choices that will impact your 2021 MAGI, such as choosing to maximize or minimize depreciation deductions for the entity. Those choices will impact each owner’s 2021 MAGI and, in turn, each owner’s 2023 Medicare health insurance premiums. Deducting Medicare health insurance premiums You can combine premiums for Medicare health insurance coverages with other qualifying health care expenses for purposes of claiming the itemized federal income tax deduction for medical expenses. You can claim an itemized medical expense deduction to the extent your total qualifying expenses exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income (AGI).  If you’re self-employed or an S corporation shareholder-employee, you can potentially claim an above-the-line deduction for health insurance premiums, including Medicare health insurance premiums. If you qualify, you don’t need to itemize to collect the tax savings. The bottom line Medicare health insurance premiums can add up to major bucks, and premiums for Part B coverage will probably increase significantly in 2023.   Medicare health insurance premiums and the related tax implications have lots of moving parts, and what you do with your 2021 Form 1040 can impact your 2023 premiums. While 2023 might seem far in the future right now, it will be here before you know it. So, if you’ve not yet filed your 2021 Form 1040, keep the Medicare health insurance premium factor in mind when making decisions on that return.  Sidebar No. 1: You can get hit with delayed premium surcharges  For years, the IRS has had big-time data processing problems, and nothing has changed. For that reason, it can take a long time for Medicare health insurance premium surcharges for the year in question to catch up with the MAGI number reported on your Form 1040 for two years earlier — and eventually reported by the IRS to the SSA. When the SSA finally gets your MAGI number for two years earlier, it will refigure your Part B and Part D surcharges, if applicable. If prior withholding from your Social Security benefits did not cover the refigured surcharges, you will be charged the difference via additional withholdings.  For example, if you extended your 2019 Form 1040, you may just now be finding out how much your actual Part B and Part D surcharges were for 2021. Any shortfall between what was actually withheld from your Social Security benefits in 2021 and what should have been withheld for that year after the SSA’s refiguring will be withheld from your 2022 benefits. You’re welcome.         SIDEBAR No. 2: You can take tax-free HSA distributions to cover Medicare health insurance premiums  Good news if you have a health savings account (HSA). You can take federal-income-tax-free HSA distributions to reimburse yourself for Medicare health insurance premium costs. If you take distributions during the year, fill out IRS Form 8899, Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), and include it with your Form 1040 for that year.  

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How muni bond interest can trigger Medicare premium hikes

How muni bond interest can trigger Medicare premium hikes

Marko Geber | DigitalVision | Getty ImagesAs investors flock to municipal bonds, also known as muni bonds, the tax-free interest may trigger a costly surprise for higher-income retirees.There’s been record demand for U.S. municipal bond funds in 2021, with an estimated $85.36 billion in net inflows through September, according to Refinitiv Lipper data.While demand slid from August through October, investors poured back into muni bonds in November, despite Democrats’ stalled attempts to increase taxes on the wealthy.However, muni bond interest may create a problem for affluent investors: Medicare premium hikes.”There are a lot of moving parts, and you need to have someone look at it holistically,” said Matthew Chancey, certified financial planner at Dempsey Lord Smith in Tampa, Florida.Higher taxes and premiumsAlthough tax-exempt muni bond interest may be appealing, those earnings may increase Social Security taxes and Medicare premiums, said Tracy Sherwood, a Williamsville, New York-based CFP at Sherwood Financial Management. That’s because the formulas for Social Security taxes and Medicare Part B and Medicare Part D use so-called modified adjusted gross income or MAGI, which includes tax-exempt muni bond interest.If half of someone’s Social Security payments plus MAGI is more than $44,000 for a joint tax return ($34,000 for individual filers), up to 85% of their Social Security benefits may be taxable.More from Personal Finance:
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How to pay 0% capital gains taxes with a six-figure incomeBut with relatively low thresholds, it’s difficult for some higher-income retirees to avoid paying tax on 85% of Social Security payments, Sherwood said. The bigger issue is that retirees with income above certain thresholds may owe a surcharge for Medicare Part B and Part D, known as the Income Related Monthly Adjustment Amount, or IRMAA. The base amount for Medicare Part B premiums in 2022 is $170.10 per month, a 14.5% jump from 2021. However, the payments start to increase for joint filers with MAGI over $182,000 (single filers above $91,000).”That’s where you’re looking at [Medicare Part B] premiums going up by about $70 or more per month,” said Sherwood. “That’s pretty significant.”The top Medicare Part B surcharge is $578.30 for couples filing together with MAGI at $750,000 or above.Retirees may also see premium increases for Medicare Part D, typically covering prescription drugs, with the top surcharge at $77.90 for the highest earners in 2022.Both calculations use MAGI from two years prior, so retirees need to consider the consequences of their income in advance, Sherwood said.”It’s something that taxpayers seem so aware of because if they get into this higher bracket, they have to pay higher premiums for a full year,” said Mary Kay Foss, certified public accountant and CPA faculty at CalCPA Education Foundation in Walnut Creek, California.It’s something that taxpayers seem so aware of because if they get into this higher bracket, they have to pay higher premiums for a full year.Mary Kay FossCPA faculty at CalCPA Education FoundationOf course, added taxes and premiums don’t mean retirees should steer clear of muni bond investing. However, they may consider weighing the pros and cons of tax-exempt interest with a financial advisor. “There’s no such thing as a good or a bad product,” Chancey said. Retirees need to assess each investment in its totality — including risk, yield, growth potential, tax implications, creditor protection and more, he said. “I look at every investment, and I ask myself this question: ‘Is the juice worth the squeeze?'” .

AARP Urges Feds to Lower 2022 Part B Premiums

AARP Urges Feds to Lower 2022 Part B Premiums

Among the reasons CMS gave for the outsize increase was that it needed to set aside money in its reserves in the event it decides to cover Aduhelm, the new Alzheimer’s drug approved in June by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). At the time, Biogen, the manufacturer, estimated the drug’s price would be $56,000 a year per patient. Since then, and after considerable pushback, Biogen cut its price estimate roughly in half, saying the drug would cost $28,200 annually effective Jan. 1. CMS has issued a proposal to cover Aduhelm on a limited basis for people enrolled in clinical trials. The agency is expected to make a final decision in April about covering the medication.  

Becerra said in a one-paragraph statement Jan. 10 that with the 50 percent Aduhelm price drop, there is “a compelling basis” for CMS to reexamine its Part B premium increase.

“At a time when the typical Medicare beneficiary has an income of less than $30,00 per year, the standard Meidcare Part B monthly premium of $170.10 represents a substantial financial burden,” Nancy LeaMond, AARP executive and chief advocacy and engagement officer, says in the letter to Becerra supporting his call for a reconsideration of the premium increase. “In light of Aduhelm’s recent price reduction” and CMS’ proposal for limited coverage of the new drug, “we strongly urge CMS to reasses the 2022 premium calculation and provide immediate relief to seniors who are paying higher premiums.”

LeaMond also said that the impact one expensive drug had on the 2022 premium increase “”highlights how high prescription drug prices affect all Americans and underscores the need for comprehensive reform. Rather than give pharmaceutical companies a ​free pass to charge outrageous prices that lead to higher costs for everyone, policymakers must ​swiftly enact comprehensive prescription drug pricing reforms.”

CMS said the other factors that contributed to the large premium hike were rising prices to cover health care, some of which were attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the action Congress took in 2021 to curb that year’s Part B premium increase in the midst of the health emergency. In 2021, the Part B premium increased by only $3 a month, but Congress directed CMS to begin paying that reduced premium back, starting in 2022.

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​Medicare Part B Premium Increase for 2022 Largest Ever

​Medicare Part B Premium Increase for 2022 Largest Ever

Premiums for some Medicare enrollees will be higher than the standard because these monthly payments are based on income. Part B beneficiaries with annual incomes greater than $91,000 will pay more — how much more will depend upon income. For example, someone filing an individual tax return whose income is between $91,000 and $114,000 will pay $238.10 a month for Part B. CMS says about 7 percent of Medicare beneficiaries will have to pay more than the standard monthly premium.

Most Medicare enrollees must pay the Part B premium whether they have original Medicare or a Medicare Advantage plan. Some Advantage plans offer a so-called “give back” benefit where the plan covers part or all of a member’s Part B monthly premium. Consumers can find those plans on the Medicare plan finder. Deductibles in MA vary by plan.

Other Medicare charges also rising

The annual Part B deductible will rise $30 next year to $233, up from this year’s $203.

For Medicare Part A, which covers hospitalization and some nursing home and home health care services, the inpatient deductible that patients must pay for each hospital admission will increase by $72 in 2022 to $1,556, up from $1,484 this year. Almost all Medicare beneficiaries (99 percent) pay no Part A premium. Only people who have not worked long enough to pay their share of Medicare taxes are liable for Part A premiums.

Open enrollment for Medicare began Oct. 15 and continues through Dec. 7. During this period,  beneficiaries can review their coverage and decide whether to make changes.

Dena Bunis covers Medicare, health care, health policy and Congress. She also writes the “Medicare Made Easy” column for the AARP Bulletin. An award-winning journalist, Bunis spent decades working for metropolitan daily newspapers, including as Washington bureau chief for the Orange County Register and as a health policy and workplace writer for Newsday.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated to include additional information.

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how to appeal higher premiums

how to appeal higher premiums

Andrii Zastrozhnov | iStock | Getty ImagesIf you’re retiring and signing up for Medicare, there’s a chance you’ll be assessed extra monthly charges — at least at first.While most enrollees pay the standard premium amounts for Part B (outpatient care) and Part D (prescription drugs), about 7% of Medicare’s 63.3 million beneficiaries end up paying extra because their income is high enough for “income-related monthly adjustment amounts,” or IRMAAs, to kick in.However, that surcharge is based on your most recent tax return available — which may not accurately reflect a reduction in income when you retire. And although you can appeal IRMAAs, it’s generally not something you can do ahead of your Medicare coverage kicking in or before the Social Security Administration sends you a “benefit determination letter.”More from Personal Finance:
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Here’s who can file taxes to the IRS for free”Often we see beneficiaries get a bill for the standard premium just after the Part B enrollment, and then they get a second bill weeks later with the addition of the IRMAA,” said Danielle Roberts, co-founder of insurance firm Boomer Benefits.”Since the Social Security Administration is not making that initial determination in time for the IRMAA to even make its way on the first premium bill, you don’t want to be trying to ask for reconsideration of a decision that has yet to be made,” Roberts said.For 2022, IRMAAs kick in for individuals with modified adjusted gross income of more than $91,000. For married couples filing joint tax returns, the surcharges start above $182,000. The extra charges increase at higher income thresholds.The standard monthly premium for Part B this year is $170.10, which is what most Medicare beneficiaries pay. (Part A, which provides hospital coverage, typically comes with no premium.)The surcharge for higher earners ranges from $68 to $408.20, depending on income. That results in monthly premiums ranging from $238.10 to $578.30.For Part D, the surcharges for 2022 range from $12.40 to $77.90. That’s in addition to any premium you pay, whether through a standalone prescription drug plan or through a Medicare Advantage Plan, which typically includes Part D coverage. While the premiums vary for prescription coverage, the average for 2022 is about $33.The process to prove that your current income is lower involves asking the Social Security Administration to reconsider their assessment. You have to fill out a form and provide supporting documents.Suitable proof may include a more recent tax return (if one is available), a letter from your former employer stating that you retired, more recent pay stubs or something similar showing evidence that your income has dropped.The required form has a list of “life-changing” events that qualify as reasons for reducing or eliminating the IRMAAs, including marriage, death of a spouse, divorce, loss of pension or the fact that you stopped working or reduced your hours.Assuming your request for reconsideration works, any IRMAAs you paid will be credited to you.”Fortunately they will make it retroactive and it will be applied as a credit to their bill,” Roberts said.If your efforts don’t work, you can appeal the decision to an administrative law judge, although the process could take time and you’d continue paying those surcharges in the meantime.Additionally, your situation is reevaluated every year, which means the IRMAAs (or whether you pay them) could change annually, depending on how volatile your income is. .