Healthcare costs are a major expense in retirement, but many retirees don't realize they may be able to deduct some of these costs. Understanding the medical expense deduction can save you significant money on your taxes.
The Medical Expense Deduction
What It Is
Medical Expense Deduction:
- Deduct medical expenses above 7.5% of AGI
- Must itemize to claim
- Why: Helps with high medical costs
Key Point: Only expenses above 7.5% of AGI are deductible.
The Threshold
7.5% of AGI:
- Must exceed this threshold
- Only excess is deductible
- Why: High threshold limits who can claim
Example: $60,000 AGI
- Threshold: $4,500 (7.5% of $60,000)
- Medical expenses: $8,000
- Deductible: $3,500 ($8,000 - $4,500)
What Qualifies as Medical Expenses
Qualified Medical Expenses
1. Doctor and Dental Visits:
- Doctor visits
- Dentist visits
- Specialist visits
- Why: Medical care
2. Prescription Medications:
- Prescription drugs
- Insulin
- Why: Medical treatment
3. Medical Equipment:
- Wheelchairs
- Crutches
- Hearing aids
- Eyeglasses
- Contact lenses
- Why: Medical devices
4. Hospital and Nursing Home Care:
- Hospital stays
- Nursing home care (if primarily medical)
- Why: Medical care
5. Insurance Premiums:
- Health insurance premiums
- Long-term care insurance premiums (limited)
- Medicare premiums (Part B, Part D, Medigap)
- Why: Medical insurance
6. Transportation:
- Mileage to medical appointments (24 cents/mile in 2026)
- Or actual transportation costs
- Why: Medical-related travel
7. Home Improvements:
- If primarily for medical care
- Ramps, railings, etc.
- Why: Medical necessity
8. Other Qualified Expenses:
- Lab fees
- X-rays
- Surgery
- Therapy
- And more
- Why: Medical care
The 7.5% Threshold
How It Works
Threshold Calculation:
- 7.5% of your AGI
- Only expenses above threshold deductible
- Why: High threshold
Example: $80,000 AGI
- Threshold: $6,000 (7.5% of $80,000)
- Medical expenses: $10,000
- Deductible: $4,000 ($10,000 - $6,000)
The Challenge
High Threshold:
- 7.5% is high
- Many retirees don't exceed it
- Why: Limits who can claim
Example: $100,000 AGI
- Threshold: $7,500
- Need $7,500+ in medical expenses: To get any deduction
Why It's Hard to Qualify
Most People Don't Itemize:
- Standard deduction: $30,800 (married)
- Must exceed standard to itemize
- Why: High standard deduction
Example:
- Medical deduction: $4,000
- Other itemized: $20,000
- Total: $24,000
- Standard: $30,800: Take standard instead
How to Calculate the Deduction
Step 1: Calculate AGI
Adjusted Gross Income:
- Your total income
- Minus above-the-line deductions
- Why: Base for threshold
Step 2: Calculate Threshold
7.5% of AGI:
- Multiply AGI by 7.5%
- Why: Threshold amount
Step 3: Add Up Medical Expenses
Qualified Medical Expenses:
- Add all qualified expenses
- Keep receipts
- Why: Must prove expenses
Step 4: Calculate Deduction
Deductible Amount:
- Medical expenses minus threshold
- Only if positive
- Why: Only excess deductible
Step 5: Compare to Standard Deduction
Must Itemize:
- Total itemized deductions
- Compare to standard
- Take whichever higher
- Why: Can't take both
What Doesn't Qualify
Non-Qualified Expenses
1. Over-the-Counter Medications (unless prescribed):
- Aspirin, cold medicine, etc.
- Why: Not prescription
2. Cosmetic Procedures:
- Cosmetic surgery (unless medical)
- Why: Not medical necessity
3. Health Club Memberships:
- Gym memberships
- Why: General health, not medical
4. Nutritional Supplements (unless prescribed):
- Vitamins, supplements
- Why: Not prescription
5. Non-Medical Nursing Home:
- If primarily custodial care
- Why: Not primarily medical
6. Life Insurance:
- Life insurance premiums
- Why: Not medical
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Strategies to Maximize the Deduction
Strategy 1: Bunch Medical Expenses
Pay 2 Years in One Year:
- Pay medical expenses in one year
- Itemize that year
- Take standard next year
- Why: Exceed threshold in one year
Example:
- Year 1: Pay $15,000 medical (itemize, get deduction)
- Year 2: Pay $2,000 medical (standard, no deduction)
- Vs. $7,500 each year: May not exceed threshold either year
Strategy 2: Time Elective Procedures
Schedule in Same Year:
- Dental work, surgery, etc.
- In same tax year
- Why: Exceed threshold
Example:
- Year 1: $5,000 medical (below threshold)
- Year 2: $12,000 medical (above threshold, get deduction)
- Better: Schedule $8,000 in Year 1 to exceed threshold
Strategy 3: Track All Expenses
Keep Detailed Records:
- All medical expenses
- Receipts, statements
- Why: Maximize deduction
Common Missed Expenses:
- Mileage to appointments
- Over-the-counter (if prescribed)
- Insurance premiums
- Why: Easy to miss
Strategy 4: Use HSA
Health Savings Account:
- Pay medical expenses from HSA
- Tax-free withdrawals
- Why: Better than deduction (no threshold)
Example: $5,000 medical expenses
- HSA: $0 tax (tax-free)
- Vs. deduction: May not exceed threshold
Health Savings Accounts (HSAs)
How HSAs Work
Triple Tax Advantage:
- Contributions: Pre-tax (or deductible)
- Growth: Tax-free
- Withdrawals: Tax-free for medical expenses
- Why: Best healthcare savings tool
HSA vs. Medical Deduction
HSA Is Better:
- No 7.5% threshold
- Tax-free (not just deduction)
- Why: More valuable
Example: $5,000 medical expenses
- HSA: $0 tax (tax-free)
- Deduction: May not exceed threshold, or only partial deduction
HSA Eligibility
Must Have HDHP:
- High-deductible health plan
- Why: Requirement for HSA
2026 Limits:
- Single: $4,150
- Family: $8,300
- Why: Contribution limits
Long-Term Care Deductions
Long-Term Care Insurance
Premiums May Be Deductible:
- As medical expense
- Subject to age-based limits
- Why: Helps with long-term care costs
2026 Limits (age-based):
- Under 40: $480
- 40-50: $890
- 50-60: $1,780
- 60-70: $4,750
- Over 70: $5,960
- Why: Age-based limits
Long-Term Care Services
Qualified Long-Term Care:
- May be deductible as medical expense
- If primarily medical care
- Why: Medical care
Example: Nursing home care
- If primarily medical: Deductible
- If primarily custodial: Not deductible
- Why: Medical vs. custodial distinction
Real Examples
Example 1: High Medical Expenses
Situation: Married, $80,000 AGI, $15,000 medical expenses
Threshold: $6,000 (7.5% of $80,000)
Deductible: $9,000 ($15,000 - $6,000)
Tax Savings: $9,000 × 22% = $1,980
Other Itemized: $20,000
Total Itemized: $29,000
Standard: $30,800
Take Standard: Actually better (but close)
Example 2: Moderate Medical Expenses
Situation: Single, $60,000 AGI, $8,000 medical expenses
Threshold: $4,500 (7.5% of $60,000)
Deductible: $3,500 ($8,000 - $4,500)
Tax Savings: $3,500 × 22% = $770
Other Itemized: $12,000
Total Itemized: $15,500
Standard: $15,400
Itemize: Slightly better ($100 more)
Example 3: Using HSA
Situation: $10,000 medical expenses, $10,000 in HSA
HSA Withdrawal: $10,000 tax-free
Tax Savings: $2,200 (at 22% bracket)
Vs. Deduction: May not exceed threshold, or only partial
HSA Better: No threshold, tax-free
Bottom Line
Healthcare costs and tax deductions:
- Medical expense deduction: Above 7.5% of AGI, must itemize
- High threshold: Many retirees don't exceed it
- Many expenses qualify: Doctor visits, prescriptions, insurance, etc.
- HSAs are better: No threshold, tax-free withdrawals
- Bunching strategy: Pay expenses in one year to exceed threshold
Key Takeaways:
- Medical expense deduction: Above 7.5% of AGI, must itemize
- High threshold: Many retirees don't exceed it
- Many expenses qualify: Doctor visits, prescriptions, insurance, equipment, etc.
- HSAs are better: No threshold, tax-free withdrawals for medical expenses
- Bunching strategy: Pay 2 years of expenses in one year to exceed threshold
- Track all expenses: Mileage, premiums, etc. - easy to miss
- Compare to standard deduction: Must itemize to claim
Action Steps:
- Understand medical expense deduction (7.5% of AGI threshold)
- Track all medical expenses throughout year
- Keep receipts and records
- Calculate if you exceed threshold
- Consider bunching strategy (pay 2 years in one year)
- Use HSA if eligible (better than deduction)
- Compare itemized to standard deduction
- Work with professional if needed
Remember: Healthcare costs are a major retirement expense, and the medical expense deduction can help, but the 7.5% threshold is high. Track all your medical expenses, consider bunching strategies, and use HSAs if eligible (they're better than the deduction). The key is understanding what qualifies and planning to maximize your tax benefits.