A man in his early 70s watches his wife move into a nursing home after a stroke. The care runs for years. By the time she passes, roughly $250,000 of their retirementA man in his early 70s watches his wife move into a nursing home after a stroke. The care runs for years. By the time she passes, roughly $250,000 of their retirement

The $250,000 Nursing Home Bill Was Just the Start. Here’s What Happened to His Social Security Next.

2026/06/19 02:02
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  • When a spouse dies, the household loses the smaller Social Security check entirely—a $1,400/month widow benefit loss means $17,000 less annually while inflation erodes the.
  • The hardest-to-undo mistakes happen years before illness: claiming the higher earner's benefit early, skipping long-term care planning in your 60s.
  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

A man in his early 70s watches his wife move into a nursing home after a stroke. The care runs for years. By the time she passes, roughly $250,000 of their retirement savings is gone. He grieves, handles the paperwork, then opens his next Social Security deposit. One check is missing. His tax bracket has changed. The bills have not.

Dave Ramsey put the math transparently on a recent episode of his show: “long term care, a nursing home stay… can run over 100 grand a year easily and the average stay is two and a half years. So you’re talking quarter of a million dollars out of your nest egg.” That alone is a financial earthquake. What surprises most widowers is the aftershock that arrives through the tax code and the Social Security system.

The Two Checks Become One

When a spouse dies, the household keeps only the larger Social Security benefit and loses the smaller one entirely. If the wife was collecting $1,400 a month and the husband $2,400, the household loses $1,400 a month, or close to $17,000 a year.

That one change reshapes everything else. The 2.8% Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for 2026 now applies to whatever check remains, not to what the couple used to receive together. The widower is indexing a smaller base against the same rising prices for groceries, utilities, and Medicare premiums.

Why the Tax Bill Often Goes Up

The second hit is the bracket squeeze. Filing jointly in 2026, a couple gets a standard deduction of $32,200 and stays in the 12% bracket up to $100,800 of taxable income. A single filer gets a standard deduction of $16,100 and crosses into the 22% bracket at $50,400.

Picture a widower pulling $60,000 from an IRA on top of $30,000 in Social Security. As a couple, most of that income sat in the 12% bracket. As a single filer, the same withdrawal pushes him into the 22% bracket on the top slice, raises the share of his Social Security that gets taxed, and can lift his Medicare Part B and Part D premiums through the income-related surcharge known as IRMAA. Same lifestyle, smaller household, bigger tax bite.

Why the Damage Compounds

Layer the bracket squeeze on top of a portfolio that already lost $250,000 to care, and the math gets ugly fast. The widower now has to fund a similar grocery and housing bill on one check, a smaller nest egg, and a higher marginal tax rate on every IRA dollar he touches.

Inflation is not helping. Consumer prices rose 4.2% annually in May 2026, the highest rate in three years, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. A single-person household spends an average of $4,716 a month, compared with $7,391 for a married couple without kids, according to Ramsey Solutions, which means a single retiree rarely spends close to half of what a couple did. Housing, utilities, property taxes, and the car cost roughly the same whether one person or two live under the roof.

What Actually Protects the Survivor

The financial decisions that protect a marriage through a long-term care crisis almost always get made years before anyone sets foot in a nursing home, not in the scramble after a diagnosis.

  1. Protect the higher earner’s benefit. The first comes down to whose Social Security check survives. Whichever spouse earned more should hold off claiming past full retirement age, ideally to 70, because that benefit becomes the one the surviving spouse lives on for the rest of their life. Every year of delay raises that floor permanently.
  2. Plan for care before it arrives. The second is facing the cost of care before it’s needed. Long-term care insurance, or a hybrid policy combining life insurance with LTC coverage, can prevent one spouse’s illness from draining the couple’s combined assets. Medicaid’s spousal-impoverishment rules offer a backstop, shielding a portion of income and assets for the healthy spouse, but only after navigating a deliberate and often complicated spend-down process.
  3. Coordinate which accounts fund the care. The third is sequencing, specifically, which accounts get tapped first to pay for care. Drawing from a taxable brokerage account ahead of a traditional IRA, or saving Roth withdrawals for last, can dramatically change the tax bill a surviving spouse inherits. The order of those withdrawals during the care years frequently matters more than the dollar total.

What ties all three together is timing. Claiming the higher earner’s benefit too soon, putting off the long-term care conversation through your 60s, or assuming a surviving spouse’s expenses will simply drop by half are mistakes that are nearly impossible to reverse once care is underway. A single session with a fee-only planner fluent in both Social Security and Medicaid rules tends to be one of the better investments a couple can make.

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The post The $250,000 Nursing Home Bill Was Just the Start. Here’s What Happened to His Social Security Next. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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