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Learn MoreWhen helping clients prepare for retirement, are you discussing potential healthcare costs with them? Historically, retirement planning has been less concerned with this figure and more concerned with market performance and inflation as assumptions in a plan. While recent research by Fidelity has shown that Americans are becoming increasingly concerned with potential healthcare costs, they are also dramatically underestimating what those costs will actually be.
According to the research:
Traditionally, clients assumed that Medicare would cover the vast majority of healthcare costs. But according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), a 65-year-old couple with median prescription-drug expenses who retired in 2017 would need $226,000 to have a 70 percent chance of being able to pay all their remaining lifetime medical bills and $273,000 to have a 90 percent chance.
Although Medicare covers most major costs (with the exception of vision and dental care), the associated out of pocket costs—like monthly premiums for certain program components, deductibles, and co-pays—can quickly add up. A “Medigap” supplemental policy can be purchased to cover many of these “out of pocket’ costs, but one thing this type of policy does not cover are the potentially significant costs associated with long-term care.
Each client’s individual financial circumstances are as different as their health. There is no cookie cutter approach to planning for a client’s healthcare costs in retirement. We believe that the planning process should always include an appropriate retirement “stress test”, which looks at multiple healthcare related variables.
Here are some health care cost considerations when delivering a retirement plan for your clients :