Seniors Are Making This Costly Mistake When Saving For Healthcare Expenses
Newspaper clippings on healthcare costs
Newspaper clippings on healthcare costs

Older Americans have the opportunity to be healthier and wealthier, but an unsavvy financial tendency is ailing them.

A large percentage of American seniors who are saving to cover healthcare expenses are skipping the tax-advantaged ways to accumulate such funds, a study has found. Researchers at the University of Michigan surveyed more than 2,000 people ages 50 to 80 on whether they were saving for medical care and, if so, how. The results indicate many older Americans aren’t saving for healthcare expenses at all. Almost as concerning, though, was the survey’s discovery that among those who are saving, many are not employing tax-efficient ways to do so.

Consider working with a financial advisor as you save for healthcare and other expenses.

Choosing to Not Get Healthcare

In January of this year, the University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging surveyed a national sample of more than 2,000 adults, ages 50 to 80, about concerns they had during 2020 regarding affording needed healthcare in the future and their saving for healthcare. The survey found that 13% delayed seeking medical care because of their worry about the cost, 12% needed medical care but did not get it because they could not afford it and 15% had problems paying medical, dental or other healthcare bills.

Furthermore, they were pessimistic about the future: 18% were not at all confident they would have enough money to pay for healthcare expenses in the next year.

Among the 71% of adults surveyed who had not put aside money to pay for healthcare in the past 12 months, 40% said they already had enough savings to pay for healthcare they might need. More than one in four who had not saved said it was because they could not afford to. Other less common reasons were not needing any healthcare services (18%) and not having thought about it (13%).

How Savers Accumulate Funds for Healthcare

Fewer than one in three adults (29%) reported that in the past 12 months they had put aside money to pay for healthcare expenses before they needed it. The savers put money aside in several ways.

Health savings accounts – The study found that only 5% of adults had put money in health savings accounts (HSAs) before they needed it. An HSA, which must be paired with a high-deductible health plan, lets you invest for future medical expenses, while enjoying special tax breaks. Your contributions, which are pre-tax, reduce your taxable income and your money grows tax free. Also, your withdrawals are tax-free as long as you use the money on qualified medical expenses. Since an HSA is yours and not your employer’s, any unused funds in the account are yours to keep, and that money continues to grow tax deferred.