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Related: About this forumRetiring and enrolling in Medicare: You may need to appeal premium surcharges if your income is drop
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2022/02/15/retiring-and-enrolling-in-medicare-how-to-appeal-higher-premiums.htmlAbout 7% of Medicare's 63.3 million beneficiaries end up paying extra for premiums because their income is high enough for "income-related monthly adjustment amounts," or IRMAAs, to kick in.
You can appeal those surcharges, although you generally have to wait until you receive a determination from the Social Security Administration.
If the agency approves, any IRMAAs you paid would be credited to your bill.
More at link.
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Retiring and enrolling in Medicare: You may need to appeal premium surcharges if your income is drop (Original Post)
SheltieLover
Feb 2022
OP
I got hit when my sister died and I got her IRA. One time hit to my taxable income, but
sinkingfeeling
Feb 2022
#2
Indykatie
(3,853 posts)1. I Got Hit Big Time Because of IRMAA
I knew I'd have to pay the extra surcharge but I was stunned to find I'd be paying $544 a month for Part B and $97 extra for the Part D plan I took in the first year. I took an early retirement deal that came with 12 months of salary. I retired on 12/1 so my 12 months of pay extended into the next year. So I'm on my second year of high IRMAA adjustments.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)3. Nice you got an extra year of salary, though!
Really pricy!
sinkingfeeling
(52,989 posts)2. I got hit when my sister died and I got her IRA. One time hit to my taxable income, but
you pay the IRMAA all year. What upset me was the hit to Part D, which I don't even have.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)4. How did they charge you for Part D when you don't have it?
Sorry to hear about your sister.
sinkingfeeling
(52,989 posts)5. They just dud.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)6. That's weird