After her first single-filer tax return entered Medicare’s two-year lookback, a 72-year-old widow in Ohio opened her Social Security statement and saw her MedicareAfter her first single-filer tax return entered Medicare’s two-year lookback, a 72-year-old widow in Ohio opened her Social Security statement and saw her Medicare

Her Husband Handled the Medicare Paperwork. After He Died, Her Premium Doubled Overnight.

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After her first single-filer tax return entered Medicare’s two-year lookback, a 72-year-old widow in Ohio opened her Social Security statement and saw her Medicare Part B premium jump from $202.90 to $405.80 a month. Her income had not gone up. Her household income had actually fallen. But the brackets she was measured against had been cut in half, and nobody warned her it was coming.

This article is for surviving spouses and for couples whose income could remain high after one spouse dies. If your household MAGI is well under $218,000 and likely to fall well under $109,000 for the survivor, IRMAA may not be an immediate concern. If you are inside that range, the next two years of tax returns and Social Security paperwork can matter more than any plan choice you make during open enrollment.

The bracket cuts in half. The income usually does not.

IRMAA, the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount, generally uses two-year-old tax returns to set this year’s Medicare premium. For 2026, SSA generally looks at your 2024 MAGI, which is adjusted gross income from Form 1040 line 11 plus tax-exempt interest from line 2a. Municipal bond income counts. People miss that.

Here is the mechanic that doubles the widow’s premium. A married couple filing jointly pays no IRMAA surcharge as long as MAGI stays at or below $218,000. A single filer loses that protection at $109,000. The single thresholds are roughly half the joint thresholds all the way up the ladder.

When one spouse dies, the survivor may still be able to file jointly for the year of death, and some surviving spouses with dependent children may qualify for favorable filing status for two more years. Many older survivors eventually file as single. Social Security drops to the larger of the two benefits, not both. A pension may step down to a survivor percentage. But brokerage income, required minimum distributions, rental income, and tax-exempt interest may not fall by half.

The math, in 2026 dollars

Take a retired couple with 2024 MAGI of $210,000. Joint return, well under the $218,000 first cliff. Each pays the standard $202.90 Part B premium in 2026 with no Part D surcharge.

The husband dies in early 2026. For the year of death, she may still be able to file jointly, but her later single-filer MAGI lands around $150,000 after his lost Social Security and a smaller survivor pension. Using 2026 brackets, that would put her in the tier where MAGI above $137,000 and up to $171,000 triggers a Part B surcharge of $202.90, lifting her total monthly Part B premium to $405.80. Part D adds another $37.50 a month. That is $2,884.80 a year in surcharges on a household that just lost an income stream.

And the 2026 2.8% Social Security COLA does not close the gap. SSA calculated that COLA from the increase in the average CPI-W for the third quarter of 2025 over the third quarter of 2024. For a survivor facing nearly $2,900 in new annual IRMAA surcharges, a modest benefit increase may not offset the Medicare bill.

SSA-44 is the lever, but only if income actually fell

Death of a spouse is one of the qualifying life-changing events on Form SSA-44. The form lets a survivor ask SSA to use more recent income when household income has gone down. That is the survivor’s main path to reducing an IRMAA surcharge before the normal two-year lookback catches up.

Two things have to be true for it to work. The death has to be the reason MAGI dropped, and the new estimated MAGI has to land in a lower bracket than the lookback year. If a survivor’s income barely moves because most of it came from her own investments and RMDs, SSA-44 will not rescue her. It is not a do-over for a high-income year. It is a correction when life actually changed the numbers.

One more nuance worth flagging: a Roth conversion or voluntary home sale generally will not qualify under SSA-44, no matter how badly it spiked MAGI. Voluntary income events are usually locked in for the premium year they affect.

What to do this month

  • File Form SSA-44 promptly after a spouse’s death if household income has fallen. Attach documentation, such as a death certificate, and provide a realistic estimate of MAGI for the current or next tax year. Ask SSA to lower the IRMAA amount based on the life-changing event, but do not assume the surcharge will be removed retroactively unless SSA approves the request and the revised income supports it.
  • Pull your most recent 1040. If your projected single MAGI is within $15,000 of the next bracket, talk to a fee-only advisor about deferring discretionary IRA withdrawals, using Qualified Charitable Distributions if eligible, or harvesting losses before December 31 to stay below the cliff.

  • Re-shop your Part D plan during the October to December open enrollment window. The IRMAA surcharge rides on top of whatever base premium your plan charges, and base premiums move every January.

The Survivor Trap Is a Paperwork Problem First

A spouse’s death can change Medicare costs long before the survivor feels financially stable again. The key is not just choosing a plan during open enrollment. It is checking the filing status, estimating the new MAGI, and filing SSA-44 quickly when income has truly fallen. The bracket may be smaller, but the surcharge is not inevitable if the paperwork catches up in time.

Sources: CMS 2026 Medicare Parts A & B premium and IRMAA materials; SSA Form SSA-44 and SSA IRMAA guidance; IRS guidance on surviving spouse filing status. Figures reflect 2026 plan-year rules.

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The post Her Husband Handled the Medicare Paperwork. After He Died, Her Premium Doubled Overnight. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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