HomeBlogMedicareIRMAA: How Your Income From Two Years Ago Can Raise Your Medicare Premiums Today

IRMAA: How Your Income From Two Years Ago Can Raise Your Medicare Premiums Today

If you are approaching age 65 or recently retired, Medicare costs might seem straightforward—you pay a standard premium, and you are good to go. However, a hidden retirement cost catches thousands of high-earning and middle-class seniors completely off guard: IRMAA (the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount).

This surcharge can quietly double or triple your Medicare premiums, and it relies entirely on money you made two years ago.

Here is everything you need to know to navigate the IRMAA pricing structure, avoid its harsh cliffs, and utilize an appeal process that most people don’t know exists.

1. How the Two-Year Lookback Works

IRMAA is not a tax or a penalty; it is an income-based surcharge added to your monthly Medicare Part B (medical insurance) and Part D (prescription drug) premiums.

To determine if you owe this surcharge, the Social Security Administration (SSA) pulls tax data directly from the IRS. Because tax returns take time to file and process, Medicare operates on a two-year lookback period.

  • For your 2026 Medicare premiums, the government looks exclusively at your 2024 tax return.

  • The metric they use is your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI).

For IRMAA purposes, MAGI is your standard Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) plus any tax-exempt interest income you received (such as municipal bond interest).

The critical flaw in this system is that your income during your final working years (e.g., 2024) is often vastly higher than your actual income once you are retired and living on a fixed budget (e.g., 2026).

2. The 2026 IRMAA Brackets & Surcharges

The base monthly Medicare Part B premium is $202.90. If your 2024 MAGI was under $109,000 (single) or $218,000 (married), that is exactly what you pay.

However, if you cross those exact lines by even one dollar, you enter the IRMAA tier system. The surcharges are added to your Part B base premium and your specific Part D plan premium:

2024 MAGI (Single Filer) 2024 MAGI (Married Jointly) Part B Surcharge Part D Surcharge Total Monthly Surcharge (Per Person)
$109,000 or less $218,000 or less $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
$109,001 to $137,000 $218,001 to $274,000 +$81.20 +$14.50 +$95.70
$137,001 to $171,000 $274,001 to $342,000 +$202.90 +$37.50 +$240.40
$171,001 to $205,000 $342,001 to $410,000 +$324.60 +$60.40 +$385.00
$205,001 to $499,999 $410,001 to $749,999 +$446.30 +$83.30 +$529.60
$500,000 or more $750,000 or more +$487.00 +$91.00 +$578.00

Note: Surcharges apply per person. For a married couple where both partners are on Medicare, a combined 2024 MAGI of $218,001 will cost the household an extra $1,914 over the year ($95.70 x 2 people x 12 months).

3. The “Cliff Effect” That Catches Retirees Off Guard

Most income tax brackets are progressive, meaning if you slip into a higher tax bracket, only the dollars above the threshold are taxed at the higher rate. IRMAA does not work this way.

IRMAA features a cliff bracket system. If you cross a threshold by a single dollar, you owe the full surcharge for that higher tier for the entire year.

Routine financial moves right around retirement can accidentally push you off this cliff:

  • One-Time Income Spikes: Selling a home, liquidating a business, or experiencing a large taxable capital gain in a brokerage account.

  • Roth Conversions: Moving large chunks of money from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA raises your MAGI for that calendar year.

  • Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs): Once you hit RMD age, mandatory withdrawals from your pre-tax accounts count entirely toward your MAGI, sometimes permanently pushing you into IRMAA territory.

4. The Hidden Appeal Process: Form SSA-44

If you receive a letter from Social Security stating you owe an IRMAA surcharge based on your income from two years ago, you are not necessarily stuck paying it. If your income has since dropped significantly, you can file an appeal using Form SSA-44 (Medicare Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount – Life-Changing Event).

The government allows you to bypass the two-year lookback if you have experienced a verified Life-Changing Event that caused your income to decrease.

Qualifying Life-Changing Events

Social Security recognizes exactly eight events for an IRMAA appeal:

  1. Work Stoppage (Full retirement)

  2. Work Reduction (Transitioning to part-time or consulting work)

  3. Death of a Spouse

  4. Marriage or Divorce

  5. Loss of Pension Income

  6. Loss of Income-Producing Property (Due to a disaster or natural event)

  7. Employer Settlement Payment (From a company bankruptcy or reorganization)

How to File the Appeal

The process can be executed by following these key steps:

1.Obtain Form SSA-44:Required Form.

Download Form SSA-44 from the official Social Security Administration website.

2.Select Your Life-Changing Event:Step 1 of the Form.

Check the box for the specific event that fits your situation (most commonly, “Work Stoppage” for new retirees) and provide the exact date the event occurred.

3.Provide Income Estimates:Step 2 of the Form.

Estimate your new, lower MAGI for the current premium year. Social Security will base your adjusted premium on this projection.

4.Gather Documentation:Crucial Step.

Attach objective proof of the event. If you retired, include a letter from your former employer or a final pay stub showing zero earnings. If a spouse passed away or you divorced, include the legal certificate.

5.Submit the Package:Final Step.

Mail or physically bring the form and supporting documentation to your local Social Security office.

 

Once approved, the SSA will adjust your premiums down to match your actual current retirement income, effectively erasing the two-year lag.

Proactive Tax Planning

Because IRMAA resets every single year based on your tax filings, managing your income brackets through strategic tax planning—such as balancing withdrawals between pre-tax and Roth accounts—is one of the most effective ways to shield your retirement savings from unexpected healthcare surcharges.

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