If you’re 65 or older when you retire, you can rest easy knowing that you’ll be eligible for Medicare. But if you want to leave the workforce earlier than that, you’ll have to find a way to bridge a health insurance gap.
Here are some options:
You typically have 30 days from the time you leave your job to request special enrollment in your spouse’s plan. The employer may subsidize less of the premium for a spouse than for the employee. Some employers levy a surcharge, say, $100 a month, to add a spouse who has other coverage available through his or her own employment. But that shouldn’t be an issue if you’re retired.
Some states have “mini COBRA” laws that require small employers to provide extended coverage, too, but term lengths and events that allow you to qualify for it vary.
COBRA is a pricey prospect for most. Typically, you must pay the full premium—including the amount the employer covered when you were an employee—plus a 2 percent administrative fee.
If you have less than 18 months to go until you turn 65, COBRA coverage will take you all the way to Medicare eligibility, which can make it a relatively seamless choice if you can afford it. You typically have 60 days from the date you receive notice to elect COBRA or the date you would lose coverage (whichever is later) to enroll. Coverage is retroactive as long as you pay any back premiums that you owe.
Marketplace plans often have higher deductibles and out-of-pocket limits than employer plans. Because marketplace-plan premiums are age-related, if you are in your early sixties you can expect a marketplace premium to run at least $1,000 a month if you don’t qualify for a premium tax credit, says Karen Pollitz, senior fellow at the Kaiser Family Foundation. The good news is that more people currently qualify for the income-based subsidies thanks to provisions of a COVID-19 relief law that were recently extended through 2025.
You generally have 60 days from the time you lose job-based coverage to enroll in a marketplace plan. Otherwise, you can sign up during open enrollment; for 2023 plans, it’s from Nov. 1, 2022, to Jan. 15, 2023.