A 68-year-old widow in Ohio opens her Medicare letter and finds her Part B premium has jumped from $202.90 to $527.50 a month. The shock is not just the dollarA 68-year-old widow in Ohio opens her Medicare letter and finds her Part B premium has jumped from $202.90 to $527.50 a month. The shock is not just the dollar

She Inherited Her Husband’s 401(k). Medicare Sent the Bill Two Years Later.

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A 68-year-old widow in Ohio opens her Medicare letter and finds her Part B premium has jumped from $202.90 to $527.50 a month. The shock is not just the dollar amount. It is the delay. Two years earlier, she took taxable distributions from her late husband’s retirement account after inheriting it. Medicare is only now sending the bill.

This is the survivor trap: a delayed Medicare surcharge caused by the collision of one-time retirement-account income, a two-year lookback, and smaller single-filer IRMAA brackets.

IRMAA (the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount) is the surcharge Medicare adds to Part B and Part D premiums when income clears a bracket. Only about 8% of Part B enrollees pay it. For 2026 premiums, the first surcharge starts when MAGI exceeds $109,000 for single filers or $218,000 for married couples filing jointly. The risk is highest when a spouse has recently died and the survivor also has a one-time income spike.

What triggers the bill

Two mechanics do the damage together.

The first is the two-year lookback. Your 2026 Medicare premiums generally come from your 2024 tax return. A one-time income event in 2024, such as a taxable inherited-account distribution, a Roth conversion, a taxable home-sale gain, or a severance check, may not hit Medicare costs until January 2026. By then, the transaction can feel like old news.

The second is the filing-status shift. When a spouse dies, the survivor can generally file jointly for the year of death if not remarried. After that, the survivor may file as a qualifying surviving spouse for income-tax purposes if eligible, but IRMAA’s main comparison still often becomes the single-filer table. A MAGI of $180,000 sits inside the no-surcharge tier for a married couple filing jointly, but three tiers deep for a single filer.

Run those together and the outcome is punishing. A widow whose 2024 MAGI hit $180,000 from ordinary Social Security income plus a large taxable inherited-account distribution may be placed in the third IRMAA tier for individuals in 2026: MAGI above $171,000 and up to $205,000. That assumes SSA is using a single-filer IRMAA category for the 2024 return.

Her Part B premium jumps to $527.50 per month. She also owes a $60.40 Part D surcharge on top of whatever her drug plan charges. That is $385 per month more than the standard Part B premium and normal Part D plan premium, or $4,620 for the year. Had the same $180,000 MAGI been measured under the married-filing-jointly IRMAA threshold, both surcharges would be zero.

2026 Part B monthly premium, single filer

2024 MAGI (single) Total monthly Part B premium
≤ $109,000 $202.90
$109,001 to $137,000 $284.10
$137,001 to $171,000 $405.80
$171,001 to $205,000 $527.50
$205,001 to $499,999 $649.20
≥ $500,000 $689.90

MAGI for IRMAA is line 11 of Form 1040 plus tax-exempt interest from line 2a. Municipal bond income that feels tax-free counts here. Check the return before assuming you are safely under a bracket.

What SSA-44 will and will not fix

The Social Security Administration lets you ask for a lower IRMAA using Form SSA-44 when a qualifying life-changing event has reduced household income. Death of a spouse is on that list. So are marriage, divorce or annulment, work stoppage, work reduction, loss of pension income, loss of income-producing property, and an employer settlement payment.

The form only helps if it fixes the right problem. SSA-44 applies when a qualifying life-changing event reduced income below the lookback-year figure. If her 2026 income is meaningfully lower than her 2024 MAGI because there is no repeat inherited-account distribution or a spouse’s wages ended, she can file SSA-44 with evidence of the death and documentation of the lower income. SSA may then use a more recent MAGI figure instead.

SSA-44 generally will not erase a surcharge caused by a Roth conversion, taxable home-sale gain, or voluntary 401(k) withdrawal by itself. Those income spikes are not the same as a qualifying life-changing event that reduced household income.

Moves to Make Before the Next Medicare Letter

  • If your spouse died in 2024 and you took inherited-account distributions that year, review the IRMAA notice before filing SSA-44. If your 2026 income is lower because the death of your spouse reduced household income, file the form with evidence of the death and documentation supporting the lower MAGI. The request only helps if the newer income figure actually lowers the IRMAA tier.

  • If your spouse is still living and you are weighing large withdrawals or Roth conversions from a 401(k) or IRA, run the income through the joint bracket first and the single bracket second. The single-filer test may matter after a death. Spreading taxable distributions or conversions across multiple tax years can sometimes keep the surviving spouse below a future IRMAA threshold.

  • If household income sits within $20,000 of any IRMAA bracket, model the tax year before making retirement-account moves. A partial Roth conversion can raise MAGI now but reduce future RMDs. A qualified charitable distribution, available at age 70½, can keep IRA dollars out of taxable income if the gift is made directly to charity. Delaying the first RMD can backfire if it stacks two RMDs into one year.

The Medicare Letter Is Really a Tax Echo

The letter arrives quietly, but the math behind it started two tax years earlier. For surviving spouses, the danger is not just a larger retirement account. It is the combination of taxable distributions, a smaller IRMAA bracket, and a Medicare lookback that arrives after the planning window has closed. The time to measure the surcharge is before the withdrawal, not after the letter.

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