05/21/2026
The five-year stretch from sixty to sixty-five is where most pre-Medicare planning falls apart. Health insurance, retirement income, tax brackets, and the Medicare timing decision all hit the same household at the same time, and the federal rules in each system do not coordinate with each other.
Here's what lands in those years.
The health insurance bridge. The most common path is the federal ACA Marketplace from sixty until Medicare eligibility at sixty-five. The federal premium subsidy is income-tested, with a sharp cliff at four hundred percent of the federal poverty line for tax year 2026 and beyond. One dollar of household income over the threshold and the full annual subsidy gets recovered at tax time.
The Roth-conversion window. The years between retirement and the Required Minimum Distribution age give the household a stretch of low-income years where Roth conversions can be done at known tax rates. Every dollar converted now is a dollar that does not have to come out under the Required Minimum Distribution rules later, and is a dollar that does not raise the Modified Adjusted Gross Income line the Medicare income-related premium reads two years after the fact.
The Medicare timing decision. Medicare eligibility starts at sixty-five. Most households enroll in Part A at sixty-five regardless of working status because Part A carries no premium for those with sufficient work credits. The Part B decision is more complex — workers still on employer coverage with twenty or more employees can defer Part B without penalty; workers at smaller employers cannot.
The Social Security claiming decision. The federal benefit rises about eight percent a year for every year claiming is delayed past full retirement age, up to seventy. Claiming early reduces the benefit permanently. The interaction with Medicare timing matters because Social Security can be claimed separately from Medicare, but most households file for both at the same time.
Three reasons the five-year stretch deserves its own planning session.
First, the federal decisions interact. A Roth conversion done at sixty-two raises the modified income line that determines the ACA subsidy at sixty-two and the Medicare premium at sixty-four. The decision in one system has dollar consequences in two others.
Second, the federal deadlines stack. The ACA enrollment window. The Medicare initial enrollment period. The Social Security claiming decision. Each has its own federal deadline structure and missing any one creates a problem the federal rules do not let undo later.
Third, the federal protections at sixty-five are narrower than most folks expect. The Medicare initial enrollment period is seven months. The Medigap Open Enrollment Period is six months. The Part D enrollment window runs concurrently. Three different federal windows on three different clocks, all running on top of the household's other decisions.
Just one example of the comprehensive planning we do at Howard Financial Group.