The Hidden Truth About Retirement Healthcare: Why Medicare Falls Short

ebri healthcare study
ebri healthcare study

For the average American, healthcare in retirement will cost more than they have in their entire savings account.

And unfortunately, Medicare won’t help.

Healthcare, of course, is the single biggest line item that most retirees need to prepare for. Recently, a study released by the EBRI (the Employee Benefit Research Institute) emphasized how important that is. The institute’s data finds that despite the coverage offered by Medicare, retirees should expect to pay significant out of pocket costs for their healthcare during retirement. These costs cover a range of expenses, including insurance premiums, program deductibles and prescription drug treatments.

For help planning your retirement, including how to pay for healthcare, consider working with a financial advisor.

Healthcare Cost Details

Exactly how healthcare costs for retirees can go ranges. One of the biggest challenges with determining retirement finances is the slipperiness of the data. A researcher’s results will change based on mortality assumptions, local costs of living, updated government programs, market returns and much more. The EBRI’s study attempts to correct for that, running a model that assumed the latest version of Medicare and a large population with varying lifespans based on standard demographics.

In that context, EBRI found that, even with supplemental insurance (generally known as “Medigap” insurance), on average men will need $166,000 in dedicated savings to pay for their healthcare needs in retirement. For women, with longer expected lifespans, that number climbs to $197,000, and an average $318,000 for two-person households.

These are large numbers on their own. What makes the EBRI’s findings even more stark, however, is how they compare with how much people have in total savings.

The median household at retirement age (65 years or older) has $87,725 in total savings. This is supplemented by Social Security income, which varies and pays more to higher-earning households. Regardless of supplemental income, though, most financial experts consider this far too low to pay for the average household’s costs in retirement.

It’s also less than half of what someone will need for their healthcare spending alone.

The Role of Medicare

ebri healthcare study
ebri healthcare study

Much of the reason for this has to do with the Medicare program.

Medicare has a reputation for simplicity. Many, if not most, Americans believe that this is a simple universal healthcare program for retirees. Yet the reality is that this program does not, and never has, provided comprehensive health insurance. Instead, it has always been a patchwork of options focused on paying for hospital stays and the occasional doctor’s visit. Although the government has updated some parts of this program over time, such as adding partial-payment for prescription drugs through Medicare D, individual retirees have always been expected to pick up the slack.