Ouch – a bad surprise ate my retirement!

Remember – the goal of this blog is to help you avoid bad retirement surprises. Another way to say bad surprise is ‘unplanned significant expense’.  Here is the equation – you can do the math, I promise:

Planned retirement income (and standard of living)   chicken-beach-cartoon-illustration-hen-suntan-cream-34831754

minus bad surprise =

lower retirement income (and lower standard of living) Bus Bench

Real life example

I have a friend who had a bad retirement surprise happen with her healthcare.  She retired with an employer-provided post-retirement pre-65 healthcare plan.  Good news – the employer still provides a pre-65 plan that guarantees coverage.  Bad news – the premiums went up very substantially, which ate into the friend’s retirement income.  Her budget teeter-totter suddenly tilted left.

Budget Teeter Totter-left tilt - v2

There are a few factors at work here:

  • There was a surprise – the friend had an significant unplanned rate increase (think over 50%).
  • Thank heavens the friend is guaranteed fairly good coverage which will help avoid additional bad surprises.
  • Regardless of what you might be paying for healthcare, the overall cost of healthcare in the US continues to inflate, so we can all expect increases, especially as the baby boomer cohort ages.
  • The earlier you retire before 65, when Medicare kicks in, the longer you are exposed to the potential impact of premium surprises. Retire at 59 and increases are potentially a severe problem.  At 63, the problem is potentially less severe because you only have two years until Medicare.

What hints does my friend’s example give us on how to avoid an insurance premium surprise pre-65?  My opinion is that pre-65 retiree health insurance from any source other than a Federal Government plan (FEHB, CHAMPUS) is a risk that could cause either high premiums or lack of coverage.  If you’re not covered under FEHB or CHAMPUS, follow along below.

A budget try-it for you!

Here’s a budget planning activity for you to try, ideally before committing to retirement.

  1. Review how changes in things like insurance premiums might affect your income. Try some scenarios.
  2. Look at your budget with your insurance premiums and other healthcare expenses as planned, then use a stress test or two (or three). What if health expenses went up 25%, 50%, or even 150%? What would it do to your budget and your lifestyle?
  3. Ask yourself how you would pay for the increase. Would it come from savings? 401(k), IRA, or other qualified money? Second mortgage?
  4. Look at what paying for a bad retirement surprise now would do to your long term income plan.

Assuming you found that at some level of increased health insurance (and overall out of pocket healthcare) cost increase your retirement standard of living would be significantly impacted, what are your options? Let’s use an old project management risk planning method to find out.  Our choices are accept the risk, mitigate the risk, or avoid the risk entirely.

  • Accept it – If costs go up, pay the increased cost (perhaps out of retirement savings) and just live with the lower standard of living.
  • Mitigate it – You might search for a cheaper plan and take more risk on yourself (danger here!).  You might go to back to work, primarily for health insurance.
  • Avoid it – Plan to retire later.  Retire somewhere where medical insurance is cheap, like Ecuador.  Seriously, see the Miami Herald Cuenca article.

Actions you can take include:

  • Learn about any pre-65 health insurance your employer offers.
  • As of right now, it looks like the ACA will be going for another year, so if you don’t have a Federal, Union, or employer pre-65 retiree health plan, go on your exchange and see what your costs (remember – premiums + deductibles/co-pays and out of pocket maxes!) might be when you retire. (If you do have a Federal, Union, or employer pre-65 plan, check out those premiums.)
  • Think about what your personal strategy will be for any pre-65 retiree health care.

Questions, comments, or suggestions for retirement surprise areas you want to know more about?
-Leave a comment
-Use ‘Contact’, above, to send an email.

Ouch – the Equifax breach. What I’m reading and doing.

tl;dr

Step 1 – Went to Equifax (also see below), checked both of us (not impacted (don’t really trust that)), signed up for monitoring, waiting to get email to finish the process (high volumes!)

Step 2  -Put temporary Fraud Alerts on our SSNs online (Experian – easy to use!).  Also see FTC article, below.

Step 3 – Have data security hygiene – I don’t give out information over the phone, email, or web, unless I call them at a number I trust (from verified website, phone number on statement, phone number on credit card) or go to their website (and from the ‘secure’ and green indicator on the browser address bar, know it’s not a spoof site).

Step 4  – Use a specific credit card for most non-routine web transactions that has a relatively low limit and I won’t have to change a bunch of auto-payments (get that 1.5% cash back!) if it’s breached.

Step 5 – Thing not to do (avoid a surprise!) – If you’re asked to pay for something on this breach, you’re probably on the wrong web page.  The Equifax check and monitoring are free and the Experian fraud alert is free.  (Remember TANSTAAFL – nothing is free.  This breach eats up your time and costs anxiety.)

I did not freeze credit reports, because I think that fraud alert will cover us.  YMMV.

Not tl;dr – read these:

Equifax:
https://www.equifaxsecurity2017.com/

Experian fraud alert:
https://www.experian.com/fraud/center.html

Credit report freeze info:
https://www.consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0497-credit-freeze-faqs#score

FTC info:
https://www.consumer.ftc.gov/blog/2017/09/equifax-data-breach-what-do

Wellsfargo comments on the breach:
https://www.wellsfargo.com/jump/enterprise/data-breach/

It’s about time…

Retired or working, you have expenses.  Some are optional (coffee at the barista’s place, new pine tree air fresheners for the car) and some are required and non-negotiable (water, electricity, gas, property tax).  Good news, some expenses are mostly required but are negotiable, so you might be able to help yourself to a positive retirement (or even pre-retirement) surprise by negotiating!

My wife is full-blooded Dutch and the Netherlanders are noted for being careful with money.  A couple of years ago, she renegotiated many of our mostly required expenses and ‘It’s about time’ for her to do it again.

It all started when I noted that our satellite TV service bill increased, a lot (it might have been DirecTV at the end of the promotion period).  The service was fine, but competitors were offering pretty similar service with much better deals.  My wife called around and saved us 50% on a new service.  It required a new installation, but a couple of hours supervising the installation was well worth the savings.

Later while we were discussing retirement planning and expenses, I noted that we had monthly trash, insurance, and phone bills, too.  The Dutch culture kicked in and soon my wife was calling firms, stating, “We’ll be retiring soon and we’ll be on a fixed income, so I need to bring these expenses down…”  Before I knew it, she had us saving significant amounts on trash, insurance, and internet.  Like over $1,000/year in savings (in all fairness, we did have a Cadillac trash plan, we just were not generating unlimited trash weekly…12 years of that – ouch!)

WIIFY?*

You too, can take advantage of these savings, but as usual, TANSTAAFL*; it will require some work:
-Find your semi required bills.
-Determine alternatives (Dish and Comcast were TV alternatives for us.)
-Call some alternatives and see what they offer.
-Call your preferred provider (perhaps it’s the one you have now) and let them know you’re retired (or nearing retirement) and will be on a fixed income and need a better deal. Let them know what the competition offered.
-Make your choice – stay with the deal your preferred option offers, or switch to the new one.
-Count your savings and use the money for other things that are important to you.

Now, here’s one you may not know about – life insurance. Talk with your trusted financial professional, because if your health has improved since your whole life or UL policy was issued (blood pressure under control, quit smoking), you might be able to get re-rated to lower premiums without having to get a whole new policy. If you have a term life, you may be able to save by re-rating or by getting a new policy. Always have the new one in hand before cancelling the old!

Let us know in the comments section if I missed some savings opportunities.

* – TANSTAAFL – “There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch.”  It shows up in No Surprises Retirement fairly often.
* – WIIFY – “What’s in it for you?’

Actions you can take include:

Bills to consider negotiating:
-TV/Cable
-Internet (Cable or DSL)
-Trash
-Homeowners insurance
-Auto insurance (is there a lizard in your future?)
-Landline phone
-Cell phone.

Look for the next update on Friday, September 8 at 12:30 PM.

Questions, comments, or suggestions for retirement surprise areas you want to know more about?
-Leave a comment
-Use ‘Contact’, above, to send an email.