HomeBusinessMedicare premiums will increase before 2025, eliminating Social Security checks for retirees

Medicare premiums will increase before 2025, eliminating Social Security checks for retirees

Seniors waiting for an increase in their Social Security checks next year may be upset to discover that some of that extra money has already been set aside.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that monthly premiums for Part B will increase to $185 in 2025, an increase of $10.30 from $174.70 in 2024. And the annual Part B deductible, that most people must pay before their Medicare coverage kicks in will increase by $17, or 7%, from $240 to $257.

That news follows the Social Security Administration’s announcement of a 2.5% cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for 2025, which the SSA says will add about $50 to the average monthly benefit of about $1,900.

Ideally, this increase in benefits would provide some breathing room for the more than 72 million retired seniors and disabled workers who have struggled with higher prices in recent years.

Maybe not next year.

“This is the second year in a row where the Part B premium has increased by almost 6%,” Mark Miller, a retirement expert and author of “Retirement Reboot,” told Yahoo Finance.

“The high dollar amount of the increase will put pressure on the Social Security COLA for seniors,” he said. “The pressure will be most painful for people with lower benefit amounts.”

For example, Miller said, someone with a $1,200 monthly benefit will see their COLA drop to 1.6% once the Medicare increases are factored in. But for someone with a high benefit of $3,500, their COLA still increases by 2.2 percent.

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In addition, the Medicare Part A deductible amount beneficiaries pay upon hospital admission will be $1,676 in 2025, an increase of $44 from $1,632 in 2024. Coinsurance amounts for hospital and skilled nursing care will also increase by 2.7 percent increase.

Not everyone will feel the pinch. Under Social Security hold harmless rules, an individual’s Part B premium increase cannot be greater than their COLA. People who receive less than about $415 in monthly Social Security benefits won’t be charged the full Part B premium increase, according to Phil Moeller, a Medicare and Social Security expert author of the book “Get What’s Yours for Medicare.”

Generally, people receiving Social Security benefits are notified by mail of their new benefit amount in early December. Most beneficiaries can also view their COLA notice online through their personal Social Security account at ssa.gov/myaccount/.

Read more: How to find out your Social Security COLA increase for 2025

Since 2007, a beneficiary’s monthly Part B premium has been based on his or her income. About 8% of Medicare recipients earn too much to qualify for the standard Part B and Part D premiums and must pay the surcharges, known as Income Related Monthly Adjustment Amounts (IRMAA). Details can be found on the CMS fact sheet.

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