theFallGuy
I Love the Smell of Napalm In the Morning
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- Nov 26, 2008
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Querston: i've read that the first 12 months of receiving SS that income is limited to $1,950 per month. Does that sound correct?
No, determining factors are how much you earned in your working life and at what age you start drawing the retirement benefit. You can go to the social security website and get the full info.
@malinoisvol Hman on it. I'm thinking about going back PT first of the year. I will get docked until 66 and 10 months. Not sure of the amount but like H said, it's on the SS website. Here in Hoptown I will just make an appointment with the SS office and ax all my questions. Right now I am fighting the Medicare add on for salary adjustment. They go back 2 years and assume you will still be making that much. Medicare is a giant PITA.If you wait to start drawing until 67 I think it is there is no percentage deducted from the payments regardless of how much you earn. I work full time and draw full retirement benefits because I waited until I reached the age where they don’t dock your benefits for working.
Once you start using it it's ok. Just give the provider your card, and they handle it.@malinoisvol Hman on it. I'm thinking about going back PT first of the year. I will get docked until 66 and 10 months. Not sure of the amount but like H said, it's on the SS website. Here in Hoptown I Oncent. They go back 2 years and assume you will still be making that much. Medicare is a giant PITA.
Well, plan A is for hospital bills, plan B is basically for doctor visits and charges, plan D is for prescriptions and plans F & G are for supplemental insurance that covers the 20% that Medicare doesn’t. Plan C is what is called Medicare Advantage which I highly recommend you stay away from because they restrict what doctors you can see and some doctors refuse to accept it. My primary care doctor has a sign on the inside of the exit door from the treatment area to the waiting room that says they do not accept Medicare Advantage plans.JC! How many plans are there?
GEEEEZZZZ... There is also a Plan N.Well, plan A is for hospital bills, plan B is basically for doctor visits and charges, plan D is for prescriptions and plans F & G are for supplemental insurance that covers the 20% that Medicare doesn’t. Plan C is what is called Medicare Advantage which I highly recommend you stay away from because they restrict what doctors you can see and some doctors refuse to accept it. My primary care doctor has a sign on the inside of the exit door from the treatment area to the waiting room that says they do not accept Medicare Advantage plans.
I have Supplemental plan G. I was in ICU for a week, and saw the first bill, Ouch over $100,000. And that was almost 7 years ago. Ended up costing me $0.00.I’ve had Medicare and a supplemental policy on plan G since 2018 and haven’t paid a medical bill since then, one of my immunotherapy infusions costs $39,000 and I was getting them every six weeks.