The post The IRMAA Surprise That Costs 401(k) Holders $1,783 a Year in Hidden Medicare Premiums appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 63-year-old with $1.4 million in a traditional 401(k) starts running Roth conversion projections at the kitchen table. The plan looks clean on paper: convert $120,000 this year, pay the tax at 24%, and shrink the eventual RMD problem. Two years later, the Medicare bill arrives and the math breaks. This is the IRMAA trap, and it is the single most expensive mistake people in this balance range make in the run-up to age 65.
The mechanic almost no one prices in correctly: Medicare uses a two-year lookback on modified adjusted gross income. The income you report on your 2026 return determines your 2028 Part B and Part D premiums. A Roth conversion, a large 401(k) withdrawal, a capital gain harvest, or even a one-time bonus in your final working year can push you past a threshold that is invisible the day you trip it.
For 2026, the standard Part B premium is $202.90 per month with no income adjustment. The first IRMAA tier kicks in at modified AGI above $109,000 for single filers or $218,000 for joint filers. Once you cross it, the surcharge stacks on top of the standard premium and stays there for the full calendar year.
Here is what the first IRMAA bracket adds to a household’s annual bill:
A married couple where only one spouse is on Medicare and the household lands just inside this tier ends up paying roughly $1,783 in combined Part B and Part D surcharges over a typical 18-month exposure window before the income drops back. Both spouses on Medicare in the same tier pay $191.40 per month combined, or $2,296.80 for the year. Cross into the second tier (joint MAGI above $274,000) and the Part B surcharge alone jumps to $202.90 per month per spouse.
The thresholds adjust for inflation, but slowly. CPI sat at 334.0 in May 2026, up from 321.4 a year earlier, and IRMAA brackets are now tied to that index. The catch: a $1.4 million traditional 401(k) compounding at a typical balanced-portfolio rate throws off meaningful unrealized growth each year, and your first RMD at 73 on that balance can easily push joint MAGI past $218,000 once Social Security is layered on top. The bracket creep is slower than the portfolio creep.
The Fed has held the funds rate at 3.75% since December, which is compressing bond yields just as healthcare costs keep climbing. National healthcare spending hit $3,700.1 billion in April 2026, up from $3,494.0 billion a year earlier. Premium inflation is the headwind retirees feel most directly, and IRMAA is the part you can actually control.
The standard deduction for joint filers is $32,200 in 2026, which gives most couples meaningful room to plan around. The $1,783 surcharge is the easiest avoidable expense in a seven-figure retirement plan. The hard part is remembering that the bill arrives 24 months after the decision that triggered it.
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The post The IRMAA Surprise That Costs 401(k) Holders $1,783 a Year in Hidden Medicare Premiums appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


