The standard Medicare Part B premium climbed to $202.90 a month in 2026, up $17.90 from $185, an increase most retirees waved off as pocket change. That shrug is the expensive part, because in retirement a small monthly number rarely stays small. Run this year’s $17.90 forward across a typical 20-year retirement and the real figure is closer to $90,000 per person.
The Raw Numbers First
The 2026 premium works out to a 9.7% jump, roughly double the size of the increase retirees absorbed the year before, and the annual deductible rose to $283. For context, inflation ran about 2.7% in 2025, so the Part B premium climbed more than three times faster than the broad cost of living.
The timing stings because the premium comes straight out of a Social Security check before the money ever arrives. A Benzinga analysis noted that the higher premium is shrinking the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment for millions of beneficiaries, since the 2026 raise of 2.8% is partly eaten by the Part B deduction. A raise that gets clawed back before it lands is not much of a raise.
Why The Trend Matters More Than One Year
A single 9.7% jump is not the real problem. The trend behind it is. Over the past two decades, Part B premiums have climbed roughly 5% to 6% a year on average, consistently faster than general inflation, because outpatient care, physician services, and expensive new drugs keep costing more.
Compounding at 6% a year has an unpleasant property, since a cost growing at that pace doubles about every 12 years. A premium that sits at $202.90 today is not drifting toward a slightly higher number. It is on a path to roughly double within a typical retirement and keep climbing after that. One projection cited by Forbes estimated Part B could reach around $5,000 a year per beneficiary by 2035, against a 2026 base of about $2,435 a year.
The 20-Year Math Nobody Adds Up
Start with the 2026 annual premium of about $2,435 and assume premiums keep growing at the historical pace. At 6% a year, one person pays roughly $90,000 in Part B premiums across a 20-year retirement. Simply multiplying $2,435 by 20 would suggest about $49,000, so the compounding nearly doubles the naive estimate.
For a married couple, double the individual figure and the total lands near $180,000 in Part B premiums alone across a shared retirement. Assume a gentler 5% growth rate and one person still pays around $80,000, with a couple near $160,000. These are illustrative projections rather than guarantees, yet even the conservative version is a major line item that most retirement plans quietly understate.
The Cost You Never See On A Statement
There is a second drag hiding behind the premium, and it lives in the money that never gets invested. This year’s $17.90 monthly increase is $214.80 over the year. Redirected into a diversified fund tracking the broad market, such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY), and repeated each year, the forgone growth over two decades runs into several thousand dollars from a single year’s increase alone. Stack up 20 years of rising premiums, each one compounding against the saver, and the lost opportunity becomes a small fortune of its own.
None of this makes Part B a bad deal. It buys real coverage that most retirees cannot replace on the open market. The useful point is narrower. The price is not static, it rises faster than income, and planning as though $202.90 is a fixed cost is a mistake.
Levers You Can Still Pull
A retiree cannot vote the premium down, but a few decisions still move the number. Higher earners pay a surcharge called IRMAA that is based on a tax return from two years earlier, so a one-time income spike from a large Roth conversion or a home sale can bump a household into a higher premium tier that lasts a year. Timing those events with an eye on the brackets can avoid an avoidable surcharge.
Building the real growth rate into a plan matters too. A projection that assumes healthcare costs rise with general inflation understates one of the largest expenses in retirement, so a healthcare-specific rate closer to 5% to 6% is more honest. A Health Savings Account, funded while still eligible, can later pay premiums and out-of-pocket costs with tax advantages, which softens each future increase.
Investors watching the other side of the trade can note that rising government healthcare spending flows toward the insurers that administer it, including Medicare Advantage leader UnitedHealth Group Inc. (NYSE:UNH), though that exposure carries its own political and cost risks and is not a reason on its own to buy or sell.
Do The Math Before You Shrug
That $18 does not really cost $18. Spread across a 20-year retirement, this single near-10% jump is one step on a staircase that adds up to roughly $90,000 per person and closer to $180,000 for a couple in Part B premiums alone, carved directly out of Social Security income.
The trap is that each year’s increase looks small enough to ignore, so it gets ignored, right up until the cumulative total turns staggering. The fix is arithmetic rather than panic. Add these costs up honestly, plan for them to rise faster than inflation, and set aside a dedicated way to pay for them. None of this is investment advice, and retirees should confirm current figures with Medicare and their own advisers before acting.
Benzinga Disclaimer: This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga’s reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.
