If your income in retirement exceeds a certain threshold, Medicare charges you significantly higher premiums for both Part B and Part D — a surcharge known as IRMAA. In 2026, Medicare IRMAA catches hundreds of thousands of seniors completely off guard, with premium bills far exceeding the standard $202.90 per month. Understanding exactly how IRMAA works, what income triggers it, and how to legally reduce it can save you thousands of dollars every year in retirement. Here is everything you need to know.
What Is Medicare IRMAA 2026?
IRMAA stands for Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount. It is an additional surcharge added to your standard Medicare Part B and Part D premiums when your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) exceeds the base threshold. IRMAA is not a penalty for wrongdoing — it is simply a means-tested premium structure where higher-income retirees pay proportionally more for Medicare coverage. The Social Security Administration determines your Medicare IRMAA in 2026 based on your tax return from two years prior — meaning your 2026 IRMAA is calculated using your 2024 MAGI from your 2024 federal income tax return.
Medicare IRMAA 2026 Brackets: Exact Thresholds and Surcharges
The following 2026 IRMAA brackets are based on your 2024 income:
| 2024 MAGI (Single Filer) | 2024 MAGI (Joint Filer) | Part B Monthly Premium | Part D Surcharge |
|---|---|---|---|
| $109,000 or below | $218,000 or below | $202.90 (standard) | $0 |
| $109,001 – $137,000 | $218,001 – $274,000 | $284.10 | $14.50/month |
| $137,001 – $164,000 | $274,001 – $328,000 | $365.30 | $37.60/month |
| $164,001 – $191,000 | $328,001 – $382,000 | $446.50 | $60.70/month |
| $191,001 – $500,000 | $382,001 – $750,000 | $527.70 | $83.80/month |
| Above $500,000 | Above $750,000 | $614.90 | $91.00/month |
A married couple where both spouses are on Medicare could pay an extra $1,224 per month — nearly $15,000 per year in additional Medicare premiums — in the highest IRMAA bracket. Even in Tier 1, a couple just over the $218,000 threshold pays an extra $162.40/month ($1,949/year) more than a couple at $217,999.
The IRMAA Cliff: Why $1 Over the Limit Costs Thousands
Medicare IRMAA 2026 uses a cliff structure — not a graduated slope. If your 2024 MAGI is just $1 over the $109,000 threshold as a single filer, you immediately owe the full Tier 1 surcharge: $81.20 more per month for Part B alone, plus $14.50 more for Part D. That $1 of extra income triggers an additional $1,161 per year in Medicare premiums. This cliff structure makes proactive retirement income management essential for anyone near the IRMAA thresholds.
What Counts as Income for IRMAA?
IRMAA is based on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI), which includes wages, self-employment income, Social Security benefits (up to 85%), pension and retirement distributions from traditional IRAs and 401(k)s, capital gains, interest and dividend income, Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs), rental income, and — critically — tax-exempt municipal bond interest (added back to MAGI even though it’s tax-free for regular income tax purposes, which surprises many retirees). Importantly, Roth IRA distributions are NOT included in MAGI, making Roth accounts a powerful IRMAA management tool.
How to Appeal Your Medicare IRMAA 2026 Determination
If your income has decreased significantly since your 2024 tax return — due to retirement, reduced hours, divorce, death of a spouse, loss of pension income, or other qualifying life events — you can file an IRMAA appeal with the Social Security Administration using Form SSA-44. If approved, SSA will recalculate your IRMAA using more recent income data, potentially saving you hundreds or thousands in premiums. Contact Social Security at 1-800-772-1213 or visit your local SSA office to begin this process.
Qualifying life events that support a successful Medicare IRMAA 2026 appeal include: marriage, divorce, or legal separation; death of a spouse; work stoppage or significant reduction in hours; loss of income-producing property; loss of pension income; and employer settlement payments.
5 Legal Strategies to Reduce Medicare IRMAA in 2026
- Build Roth IRA assets now. If you are not yet on Medicare, converting traditional IRA assets to Roth during lower-income years creates a pool of tax-free retirement income that does not count toward MAGI. Roth distributions are the single most powerful long-term IRMAA reduction strategy available to pre-retirees.
- Manage capital gains strategically. Tax-loss harvesting offsets realized gains. Deferring large stock sales to years when your income is lower can prevent triggering higher IRMAA brackets. Consider spreading large asset liquidations across multiple tax years.
- Use Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs). If you are 70½ or older and must take RMDs, you can donate up to $105,000 per year directly from your IRA to a qualified charity. The donation is excluded from your AGI, directly reducing your MAGI and potentially keeping you below an IRMAA threshold.
- Time major income events carefully. Large one-time income events — home sales, Roth conversions, pension lump sums — ripple into your IRMAA brackets two years later due to the lookback period. Consult a tax advisor before completing any major transaction that will increase your income.
- Work with a retirement income planner. IRMAA bracket management requires multi-year income projection and coordination of RMDs, Social Security timing, investment withdrawals, and tax strategy. A fee-only financial planner with Medicare expertise can model the optimal approach for your specific situation.
Key Takeaway
Medicare IRMAA 2026 is a significant and often underestimated cost for higher-income retirees. The two-year income lookback, cliff surcharge structure, and broad definition of MAGI make proactive planning essential — ideally years before you enroll in Medicare. If your 2026 IRMAA determination is based on income you no longer earn, appeal immediately using Form SSA-44. And if your income is approaching threshold levels today, begin working with an advisor to implement legal reduction strategies before they affect your Medicare premiums two years from now.
Sources
- SSA.gov — Form SSA-44 (IRMAA Appeal Form)
- Medicare.gov — IRMAA and Higher-Income Medicare Costs
- Kiplinger — Medicare IRMAA 2026 Brackets and Surcharges
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