riptides
Super Member
Last year was the first year the Affordable Care Act was really in full effect. Ideology aside, I saw the healthcare marketplace as a great way to get an idea of healthcare costs when we want to retire. Your number above doesn't jive with what I was estimating, so I went ahead and ran some numbers here:
https://www.healthcare.gov/see-plans/
I made a hypothetical family of five where the parents want to retire early. The parents are 55 and 58, and the "children" are 22, 23, and 24. I figured this is about the worst-case scenario for a family, since you'd expect some of your children to qualify for their own insurance. I chose a very high household income, so that there is no subsidy at all for any of the plans. Again, worst-case. Nobody in this family smokes. If you choose to spend $8/pack to wreck your health, you don't get to complain when you have to pay more for medical coverage.
I ignored "bronze" and "silver" level coverages, since the out-of-pocket maximum tends to be higher and they will be expensive if anybody has any major medical issues. I found that there is a lot of "gold" and "platinum" coverage available for around $2k/mo with reasonable out-of-pocket maximums (There was a Humana plan for ~$1800/mo with a $3k out of pocket maximum for the family, for instance). Even if you hit the out-of-pocket maximum every year, your total spend will be under half of what you were spending on premiums alone.
You may want to look around again for coverage and see if you can't find something more reasonable.
Yeah, I looked around for coverage, that is what the exchanges and marketplace allow one to do.
2k a month is still 24k a year. Times 2 and your right at 50k. Close to my figure for the last two years.
Bottom line is unless you have a pension, or are close to medicare age inclusion coverage (COBRA) , don't even think about retiring early without something or someone bridging the gap for you.