Healthcare Mistakes Advisors Make When Clients Retire Early

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When it comes to retirement planning, your clients have a lot to consider — especially if they want to retire before 65. Tax planning and income management are top of mind for most advisors and clients when creating retirement plans, but an oversight I see advisors make again and again is not considering how their clients will receive healthcare coverage if they retire before 65.

Having worked with financial advisors for many years, I can say confidently that most clients will retire “early” — well in advance of 65 in some cases. For the 60.4% of Americans under 65 who receive healthcare coverage through an employer, that means transitioning to a new type of insurance. Once retired, this insurance disappears. So if your client retires before 65 (when they’re eligible for Medicare), how will they fill this coverage gap?

In this article, I’ll share three mistakes advisors make when it comes to the intersection of early retirement and health insurance, and what to do instead.

1. Assuming COBRA will be the right choice for all their pre-65 retiree clients.

For those unfamiliar, COBRA (the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act) coverage is the continuation of your client’s employer-sponsored plan. Just continuing your client’s employer-sponsored health insurance sounds like a no-brainer, right? Unfortunately, this option is rarely the optimal choice for most pre-65 retirees, and assuming it’s the best option is a big mistake.