Posted on 08/02/2018 9:22:46 AM PDT by Red Badger
If you’re at full retirement age you must take Medicare or you will be penalized later for not taking it. Many corporate medical plans (if you continue working) put Medicare as primary insurance and the corporate plan as excess—another inducement to make Medicare a necessity.
Also, if you do not sign up for some form of medicare prescription coverage at 65 you will also be penalized, with higher premiums, when you do purchase prescription coverage.
It's truly a government forced racket.
I’m going to start taking my Social Sec. later this year, a few months after I turn 62. Why? A. Who knows if this manner of individual payout will remain in force for the next few decades? I have heard of pension plans for huge industries such as General Motors. being ‘adjusted’ in spite of what was promised. Sometimes, the pension simply becomes too expensive to maintain. Retirees in Michigan were furious, but there was exactly nothing that could be done about it. The monies really were needed elsewhere. Apparently, it was also legal. I know Social Security is not the same thing as a pension, per se. But it’s similar enough.
B. Due to certain health conditions, I don’t know if I’ll even be around in ten years, let alone able to get out and job hunt. I guess none of us really knows. I don’t have a great amount saved up for retirement. Therefore, I have an attitude of making my present life as comfortable as I can, without going Hog-wild, economically speaking.
Seems like 64 is the spot for me. My full retirement is 66 1/2. I’ve seen too many people put it off, start collecting and die not long after that. Another thing I factor in is advice from my nearly 90 year old neighbor. He tells me that you may think you need a lot of money when you’re in your 60s, but by the time you hit late 70s, you just don’t need much money, you don’t do as much.
Luckily, we're still in relatively good health at 69 and 70. The smaller monthly amounts at age 62 hasn't affect our lifestyle at all.
Everybody's different but I don't understand the rationale for starting to draw it later, when you may not be around.
Between 60 and 70 is when many people start to have health issues and/or die. Most of my high school classmates who have died, have done so in this age decade.
What little extra money you would have received by waiting until later, pales in comparison to getting the money into your hands earlier when you can still spend it. Deciding to draw it at an older age may be too late.
Part of something is always better than all of nothing.
see #21
Yeah, but what you’re paying in arrives at my house every month so thanks for that. It sort of like me paying a crap load of school taxes. My youngest is 43 and NOT going to school. ;-)
I know two retired veterans who still make a good income working and they aren't able to get VA medical care because their income exceeds the VA's guidelines.
I took it at 62 because it worked out better for me to collect for an extra 4 years at a rate similar to the rate you get when you collect at 66. I turned 64 on July 1 and have been enjoying my SS for two years, and still have 2 more years I wouldnt have had I waited. I wouldnt really collect all that much more per month if Id waited til I was 66. My husband is 71 and is a cancer survivor and not as healthy as me, Im sorry to say, but should he pass away before me, I will drop mine and collect his, which at a lower rate than he collects now will still be more than what I would have collected at my 66 year old rate. So why not collect it for those extra four years?
My generation was saying the same thing in the late 60’s.
I didn’t ask them how much the pay was in 1973..................
If you make over a certain amount I guess they figure that you are “rich” enough to pay for your own health care and shouldn’t “burden” the government with it even though you volunteered to serve. I’m currently at the lowest level available for VA care. Co-pays etc. But the issue is a med I need. I am able to get it through the VA for $11.00 but outside it would be in excess of $1,800. I would not be able to afford it in that case so..............
I’m 30 years away from retirement. I’m expecting that I’ll have only my pension and savings.
I was shooting for 66, but going to do it at 70.
Medicare A comes without charge, so you might as well sign up for it. Medicare B is optional. You are not required to sign up for it, but you should have an alternative available if you don't. The decision depends on your own particular situation. But for every year past 65 that you don't sign up for B, the premium does go up 10% if you eventually jump in.
medicare-ss signups generally unrelated.
https://www.medicare.gov/people-like-me/new-to-medicare/getting-started-with-medicare.html
click thru links to get where you need to get.
Part A is premium free, so no reason not to take when eligible.
I’m 72 and still working. Because they automatically signed me up at 65, I did not know I was in Medicare. Last year my employer offered the Health Savings Account (HSA) which I signed up for. 10 months in they told me that I was inelgible because I was in the Medicare system even though I was on my work healthcare system. I had to repay all the copays and other medical bills that I used the HSA for and then I had to pay the income tax on it to boot. Writing a check for $2K was hard.
Medicare kicks in at 65, so if you start taking SS early, you won’t be getting Medicare. Be aware that if you don’t take Medicare at 65 without jumping through some specific hoops, you incur a lifetime penalty for late enrollment. Go to the SS office a few months before your 65th birthday to make sure you enroll on Medicare on time.
My mom didn’t follow the rules and had to pay extra for part B coverage for approximately 35 years.
Don’t forget that taxes are still withdrawn from ss payments. Some states don’t tax, but Federal and some local taxes come out.
Thanks for the clarification, i.e. the difference between parts A & B. In my mind I always lump them together, which I shouldn’t.
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