Subscribe

Fidelity says retirees can expect to spend $285,000 on health care

Closeup Money rolled up with pills falling out, high cost, expensive healthcare

Annual study says total estimated cost has risen more slowly in past two years.

A 65-year old couple retiring this year can expect to spend $285,000 on health care and medical expenses throughout retirement, according to an annual health care study done by Fidelity.

For individuals, the estimate is $150,000 for women and $135,000 for men.

While the cost of health care for couples rose $5,000 from the $280,000 estimate of 2018, costs over the last two years have risen more slowly — by 3.6% — than in the period from 2015 to 2017, when the estimate grew to $275,000 from $245,000, a 12.2% increase.

(More:Democrats offer `Medicare for All’ bill to transform health care)

“The promising news for this year’s retirees is that out-of-pocket Medicare costs have leveled,” Fidelity said in a release. “However, many Americans are still unclear about what Medicare does and does not cover, likely a reason many still underestimate the costs of health care in retirement.”

Fidelity said that while its estimate is for a couple retiring in 2019, the numbers are a “call-to-action to younger generations,” reminding them to take advantage of the time and investing opportunities they may have available to them. It suggests adopting “diligent savings habits” and making use of vehicles such as Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) to maximize the effects of saving.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Fed will cut once before presidential election, says Howard Lutnick

Cantor Fitzgerald’s chief executive predicts the central bank will “show off a little bit” just before voters head to the polls.

Tech stocks tumble after Meta misses on earnings

The Nasdaq 100 shed $400B, the Facebook parent slumped by as much as 16%, and AI believers are left on tenterhooks.

Concord ups the ante on Hipgnosis takeover battle

The music rights investor increased its bid to own the London-listed company’s enviable library of songs from iconic acts.

Trump Media doubles down on illegal short-selling claims

Parent company of Truth Social has flagged concerns that so-called "naked" short sales are happening.

Tesla soars as Musk’s cheaper EVs calm fears over strategy

EV stock rebounds after suffering longest rout since late 2022.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print