Millions of Americans facing squeezed Social Security checks due to rising Medicare premiums.
Starting in 2026, the average Medicare Part B premium will skyrocket by 9.7% to a whopping $202.90 per month, leaving seniors with barely enough wiggle room to keep up with inflation. This means that for millions of retirees relying on Social Security as their primary source of income, the increase will effectively lower next year's cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) to just 1.9%, a paltry fraction of the current inflation rate.
The culprit behind this alarming trend? Soaring healthcare costs, which have been accelerating at an alarming rate for all Americans. The average out-of-pocket healthcare expenses in 2023 jumped by 9% from 2020 on an inflation-adjusted basis, with seniors and other groups feeling the pinch hardest.
In addition to the Part B premium hike, Medicare's costs are also rising due to increased demand for medical services. With lawmakers struggling to extend premium tax credits that help lower healthcare costs for millions of Americans, working adults may soon face steep rate hikes if Congress fails to act. The expiration of these credits at the end of 2025 has become a major sticking point in recent government shutdown talks.
Meanwhile, workers with employee-sponsored coverage can expect their healthcare costs to climb by 6-7% next year, according to an analysis from Mercer. This squeeze on household budgets is set to have far-reaching consequences for seniors relying heavily on Social Security and Medicare for their livelihoods, as Max Richtman of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare warned: "So many rely on [Social Security] for all or most of their income...This is gonna hurt."
Starting in 2026, the average Medicare Part B premium will skyrocket by 9.7% to a whopping $202.90 per month, leaving seniors with barely enough wiggle room to keep up with inflation. This means that for millions of retirees relying on Social Security as their primary source of income, the increase will effectively lower next year's cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) to just 1.9%, a paltry fraction of the current inflation rate.
The culprit behind this alarming trend? Soaring healthcare costs, which have been accelerating at an alarming rate for all Americans. The average out-of-pocket healthcare expenses in 2023 jumped by 9% from 2020 on an inflation-adjusted basis, with seniors and other groups feeling the pinch hardest.
In addition to the Part B premium hike, Medicare's costs are also rising due to increased demand for medical services. With lawmakers struggling to extend premium tax credits that help lower healthcare costs for millions of Americans, working adults may soon face steep rate hikes if Congress fails to act. The expiration of these credits at the end of 2025 has become a major sticking point in recent government shutdown talks.
Meanwhile, workers with employee-sponsored coverage can expect their healthcare costs to climb by 6-7% next year, according to an analysis from Mercer. This squeeze on household budgets is set to have far-reaching consequences for seniors relying heavily on Social Security and Medicare for their livelihoods, as Max Richtman of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare warned: "So many rely on [Social Security] for all or most of their income...This is gonna hurt."