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health insurance options and opinions
11-25-2020, 09:05 PM
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#1
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: Erie
Posts: 234
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health insurance options and opinions
Hi, at age 62 this year, I've been fortunate to accumulate just over 2M in investment assets with a moderate-conservative portfolio.. I'm single, in good health... exercise/run regularly, have no debt, and own my home -valued in the realm of 160k. I live in a relatively low COLA market.
I've been a freelance performer & sole proprietor for about 40 years and have begun scaling back on work so I guess am seeing myself as semi-retired and able to work when/if I feel like it, going forward. My annual spending is pretty conservative with a not very extravagant lifestyle and I've always been pretty frugal. I'd guesstimate average annual spending in the $40k ballpark.
This year I've been forced to a COBRA health plan, as I lost eligibility for a union sponsored Anthem BCBS PPO plan, which is pretty good and has kind of been a gift for the last 5 or so years, low deductible and ridiculously cheap by most standards. The premium shifted from about 150/month to 720/month effective in October, and its slated to be raised to 760/month in 2021. I've shopped a bit and found there is not much out there that's significantly cheaper in the ACA marketplace in a high deductible plan, which is what I'd prefer. Ideally I'd be good with something like a catastrophic plan but no such thing exists AFAIK for my age bracket...
Due to dividend income that will probably exceed 50k/year, I do not qualify for any ACA subsidy...unless there's some angle i'm unaware of. It's frustrating having to move to such a high premium, especially given that I'd prefer something that would be good for 'major medical' expenses and could get by with out of pocket for any routine office visits, specialists et.al. As I say, no major health issues and I'm a big believer in preventative care, healthy habits and lifestyle, diet, exercise et.al.
So all this is to say I'd welcome any thoughts on whether there's something i'm missing with regard to finding lower cost health care .... I know there are HSA plans but the premiums are still high (to me anyway) - 600-700 / month in most cases. If I were alot younger I'd probably consider just going without insurance and paying out -of pocket, since on average I'm not spending anything remotely close to 750 a month in healthcare costs - and the value of insurance would be mainly for catastrophic/major 'event' protection.
One sidenote..I've worked with an hourly FA whom I like, for many years and decided in mid 2020 that i'd just switch to his conventional 'AUM' fee structure - which in this case is .60%. In hindsight I am reconsidering this, especially given the fact that if I weren't paying out 6/10 of a percent to him those $$ would more than offset the cost of maintaining this COBRA plan or something comparable in the marketplace... I am inclined to revert to our previous arrangement wherein we were meeting a few times a year at a $300 per hour rate. As such, even if I met with him for a total of 15 hours a year, it's still far cheaper than an AUM/percentage of assets FA relationship.
Sorry for the long-winded post but I appreciate the wisdom of the forum and I know the more background details the better when asking for any advice. I'm interested in any general or specific thoughts about options I may not be thinking of to minimize my health insurance costs...including whether there are tax advantages/angles I might not be aware of, to that end. Thanks much, and
Happy Thanksgiving to All !
Mike
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11-26-2020, 03:40 AM
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#2
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,871
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First thought that comes to mind is: what funds do you have in your taxable accounts? Can you reduce that $50K?
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11-26-2020, 05:34 AM
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#3
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Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 13,846
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Well the good news is you only have to worry about the HI costs for a few years till MC.
Can you shift some of your taxable equities to be less dividend-heavy? I'd look to reducing your income below the cliff, which is $51040 for 2021 for a single person. An HSA plan will also allow you to help manage income since the annual contribution comes off your MAGI. So shaving another $3600 of the difference.
Yes I would get out of the AUM agreement and back to an annual meeting where you go from there. As fast as possible.
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11-26-2020, 05:52 AM
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#4
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 1,821
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Get out of the AUM yesterday!
As far as hourly FA visits go, why do you need so many(you mentioned 15) per year?
It seems you have done a great job accumulating wealth so must have a pretty good handle on the situation.
I think you could probably simplify and get an asset allocation plan that only requires a few visits per year or at most once a quarter.
Everybody says they are healthy until they are not especially as we get into our 60's and beyond.
Pay the $720/month, it's only for 3 years and the savings from the AUM fee structure alone would pay for it each year and you only need to cover 3 years.
.6% of 2 million is $12000/year. Your health premiums would be less than $9000 leaving you $3000 or enough for 10 annual $300/hour visits.
That is what I would do
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11-26-2020, 07:58 AM
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#5
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Sarasota, FL & Vermont
Posts: 36,204
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My first thought was to invest taxable account money in 4 year MYGAs where the income is tax deferred as a way to manage your income to qualify for subsidies, but I'm guessing that with $50k of dividends that most of your $2M stash is in taxable accounts and probably highly appreciated equities that reconfiguring would result in signficant LTCG.
I'd frame it this way. You concede that the $150 that you currently pay is ridiculously inexpensive but let's use that anyway. Your choice is to work for 3 more years and only have to pay $150/month for health insurance or retire and be free to do whatever you want and pay $760/month for health insurance. The difference over 3 years is $21,960 or $7,320/year... and is part of the cost of freedom from workingand you can easily afford the $22k for 3 years of freedom.
If it makes you feel better to reverse the AUM and use those savings to help fund it by all means go for it... I think your original deal was better anyway.
__________________
If something cannot endure laughter.... it cannot endure.
Patience is the art of concealing your impatience.
Slow and steady wins the race.
Retired Jan 2012 at age 56
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11-26-2020, 09:45 AM
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#6
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Aug 2017
Posts: 394
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You should take the COBRA policy.
At your age, the COBRA policy cost is being subsidized by the risk pool including on average people younger than you. In contrast, an ACA individual policy will be rated to your age. If the ACA policy is cheaper, it is because of reduced coverage.
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11-26-2020, 11:35 AM
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#7
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Ormond Beach
Posts: 1,407
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Aerides
Can you shift some of your taxable equities to be less dividend-heavy? I'd look to reducing your income below the cliff, which is $51040 for 2021 for a single person. An HSA plan will also allow you to help manage income since the annual contribution comes off your MAGI. So shaving another $3600 of the difference.
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Agreed, all you have to do is get your income below ACA max and you will see a nice reduction in premium. Should be good enough to get you through another couple of years until you get Medicare. In my area a Bronze plan with $50k income is about $200/mo for a 62 year old man.
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11-27-2020, 12:40 PM
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#8
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: Erie
Posts: 234
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Quote:
Originally Posted by finnski1
Get out of the AUM yesterday! As far as hourly FA visits go, why do you need so many(you mentioned 15) per year? It seems you have done a great job accumulating wealth so must have a pretty good handle on the situation.
I think you could probably simplify and get an asset allocation plan that only requires a few visits per year or at most once a quarter. Everybody says they are healthy until they are not especially as we get into our 60's and beyond.
Pay the $720/month, it's only for 3 years and the savings from the AUM fee structure alone would pay for it each year and you only need to cover 3 years. .6% of 2 million is $12000/year. Your health premiums would be less than $9000 leaving you $3000 or enough for 10 annual $300/hour visits.
That is what I would do
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Thanks for all replies on this. I think your summation here is pretty logical.
The decision to try the AUM arrangement was an impulsive thing as I was feeling a lot of uncertainty about what seemed some extraordinary financial market challenges this year and thought I might need more of a hands on active oversight, but frankly it hasn't really changed anything
The consultations with the advisor were as few as 5-6 times a year as well as occasional email questions - I was just saying that even at up to 15 times a year, the billable time is far less than paying the AUM amount. I think I'll ask him if we can revert to the hourly model in the next quarter once we get through whatever year end rebalancing and tax loss harvesting is needed.
Rather than mess with dividend income funds to get the subsidy, it does seem to make more sense to keep the COBRA plan, figuring eligibility for medicare coverage kicks in within a few years. I'm not sure if an HSA could be used to pay COBRA expenses but am guessing that is not an option.
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11-27-2020, 08:46 PM
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#9
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Sarasota, FL & Vermont
Posts: 36,204
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Actually, COBRA premiums are a qualified medical expenses.
Quote:
If an employee elects COBRA, can HSA funds be used to pay for COBRA premiums? A. Yes. The premiums for health care continuation coverage under COBRA are considered an eligible medical expense, and payment of the premiums can be made using HSA funds.
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__________________
If something cannot endure laughter.... it cannot endure.
Patience is the art of concealing your impatience.
Slow and steady wins the race.
Retired Jan 2012 at age 56
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11-28-2020, 03:47 AM
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#10
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Feb 2014
Location: South central PA
Posts: 3,466
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A couple of other things to remember:
If you have HSA eligible insurance, through COBRA or the ACA, you can reduce your MAGI by putting money into an HSA.
If you have self employment income, ACA premiums are fully deducted off of your income, up to the limit of your self employment income. COBRA premiums are not. Line 16 of the 1040.
If you are near the cliff, that can make the difference.
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11-28-2020, 04:14 AM
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#11
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Administrator
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Chicagoland
Posts: 40,518
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Thread moved to the health care forum
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11-28-2020, 08:02 AM
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#12
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 510
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I thought COBRA coverage had a time limit on it? For instance, you can only use COBRA to extend your job's group plan coverage for 6 - 12 months. I seem to recall that from my new employee orientation sessions years ago, did ACA remove that?
I really like pb4uski's analysis on the 3 year total cost. I know that I pay way more attention to monthly bills and don't always think long term, but in your case, taking the "3 year view" seems like a good approach. Especially since you can try to work some angles with your portfolio to reduce your income below the ACA cliff or reduce your advisor fees.
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11-28-2020, 08:18 AM
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#13
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 37,931
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pb4uski
Actually, COBRA premiums are a qualified medical expenses.
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Ouch! COBRA premiums qualified. Regular medical insurance premiums not until Medicare. Stinks!
__________________
Retired since summer 1999.
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11-28-2020, 09:29 AM
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#14
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Ormond Beach
Posts: 1,407
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mikes425
Rather than mess with dividend income funds to get the subsidy, it does seem to make more sense to keep the COBRA plan, figuring eligibility for medicare coverage kicks in within a few years. I'm not sure if an HSA could be used to pay COBRA expenses but am guessing that is not an option.
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It makes more sense to lose ~$6k a year for 3 years when all you have to do to get subsidized ACA is reduce income just a little (going by your OP estimate of ~$50k in div income)? And you can also deduct the ACA premium cost for SE income, which is going to be $2-3k a year and will help get you below the ACA max.
Not following the logic here. If you were way over the cap sure, but you seem to be close enough to make it work. I'd much rather pay around $200/mo. for HI than $760 if I can.
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11-28-2020, 10:08 AM
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#15
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Coronado
Posts: 3,655
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoiseBoy
I thought COBRA coverage had a time limit on it? For instance, you can only use COBRA to extend your job's group plan coverage for 6 - 12 months. I seem to recall that from my new employee orientation sessions years ago, did ACA remove that?
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The minimum time that an employer must offer for COBRA is 18 months. I don't believe ACA changed that.
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11-28-2020, 02:24 PM
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#16
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: Erie
Posts: 234
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Quote:
Originally Posted by audreyh1
Ouch! COBRA premiums qualified. Regular medical insurance premiums not until Medicare. Stinks!
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Well, actually not an 'ouch' for me if I'm forced into COBRA which I am. I'll take any advantage I can to reduce the massive hit I'm taking in going from 150 a month to 750 a month for this Anthem PPO plan : )
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11-28-2020, 02:36 PM
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#17
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: Erie
Posts: 234
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GTFan
It makes more sense to lose ~$6k a year for 3 years when all you have to do to get subsidized ACA is reduce income just a little (going by your OP estimate of ~$50k in div income)? And you can also deduct the ACA premium cost for SE income, which is going to be $2-3k a year and will help get you below the ACA max.
Not following the logic here. If you were way over the cap sure, but you seem to be close enough to make it work. I'd much rather pay around $200/mo. for HI than $760 if I can.
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Well I can't be exactly certain what the precise dividend income is going to be... Or whether I might have freelance income that would push the amount even higher. I mean, it could be closer to 60k in 2020. To me it sounds kind of tedious to have to try to regulate income in order to make it come out 'just right' to qualify for the ACA subsidy. OTOH just dumping the AUM manager cost provides a more simplistic way to cover the higher insurance expense (and justify making that change to the Advisor for that matter..as a "value oriented' investor, he should appreciate the logic; )
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11-28-2020, 02:36 PM
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#18
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: Erie
Posts: 234
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cathy63
The minimum time that an employer must offer for COBRA is 18 months. I don't believe ACA changed that.
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Actually my COBRA is 18 months and it doesn't really correlate with anything relating to the ACA...it's just the standard COBRA term.
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11-28-2020, 02:52 PM
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#19
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: Erie
Posts: 234
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EastWest Gal
A couple of other things to remember:
If you have HSA eligible insurance, through COBRA or the ACA, you can reduce your MAGI by putting money into an HSA.
If you have self employment income, ACA premiums are fully deducted off of your income, up to the limit of your self employment income. COBRA premiums are not. Line 16 of the 1040.
If you are near the cliff, that can make the difference.
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Thanks, but I'm somewhat confused on a couple things.
I am on COBRA now. I do not have an HSA. Can I open an HSA account, and then set it up to pay the monthly COBRA Premium for this plan, or does the insurance plan itself, have to be 'qualified' to be eligible for an HSA? There is no HSA-specific option with this insurance, it's just the same Plan I was on, only now I'm paying the full freight with no employer subsidy.
As for taxes, if I understand correctly you're basically saying I can't deduct COBRA premiums. But, if I qualified for an ACA plan with a subsidy or not, I can deduct the full amount of the premiums. When you say up to the limit of my self employment income, you mean I can claim the same dollar amount in premium cost as whatever I would earn in self-employment income? Apologies, I am very tax illerate and don't even understand my accountant most of the time. The intentionally proprietary complexity of that world is effectively a foreign language to me.
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11-28-2020, 04:02 PM
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#20
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 2,962
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If you select a bronze ACA plan with HSA eligibility, you can put $8000 into an HSA to deduct from your modified adjusted gross income. That could put you into subsidy-land.
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