Medicare Part B and Part D surcharges kick in when your two-year-old MAGI goes over $109,000 (single) or $218,000 (joint) under 2026 rules.
If you’ve heard that Medicare premiums rise once you “make too much,” you’re hearing about IRMAA: the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount. It’s a surcharge added to Medicare Part B and Part D when your income crosses set lines. One dollar over a line can bump you into a higher tier for the full year, so the exact cutoffs matter.
This guide answers the income level question fast, then shows how to map your tax return to the right bracket, what you’ll pay in 2026, and what you can do if the surcharge doesn’t match your current life.
What Triggers Higher Medicare Premiums
Medicare raises premiums for higher earners through IRMAA. It applies to:
- Part B (medical insurance): a higher monthly premium
- Part D (drug coverage): a monthly add-on stacked on top of your plan premium
The decision is based on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) from two years earlier. So 2026 Medicare surcharges usually come from your 2024 tax return. The agency uses IRS data, then Social Security sets your tier and notifies you. The mechanics are spelled out in Social Security’s IRMAA tables and process notes. SSA IRMAA sliding scale tables for 2026
What MAGI Means For IRMAA
For Medicare IRMAA, MAGI is simple: your adjusted gross income plus tax-exempt interest. Social Security points to the lines on Form 1040 that feed the calculation, which helps you verify the number without guesswork. SSA definition of MAGI used for IRMAA
If you file a standard Form 1040, the parts to watch are:
- Adjusted gross income (AGI)
- Tax-exempt interest (often from municipal bond interest)
Why A Two-Year Lookback Can Surprise People
Because the system uses a two-year lookback, a one-time spike can follow you into Medicare later. A big capital gain, a large IRA withdrawal, a Roth conversion, a severance payout, or selling property can push MAGI across a line. Then you pay the higher Medicare amount for the full calendar year tied to that prior return.
At What Income Level Do My Medicare Premiums Increase?
For 2026, the first IRMAA line is:
- Single (or head of household, or qualifying surviving spouse): over $109,000 MAGI (from the 2024 return)
- Married filing jointly: over $218,000 MAGI (from the 2024 return)
Once you cross that first line, your Part B premium rises above the standard amount. CMS publishes the standard Part B premium for the year, and Social Security layers the IRMAA tiers on top. CMS 2026 Part B premium amount
What “Standard Part B Premium” Means In 2026
In 2026, the standard Part B premium is $202.90 per month. IRMAA tiers raise that monthly amount to higher totals based on income ranges. Your Part D plan premium stays plan-specific, and IRMAA adds a separate monthly Part D surcharge on top.
How Filing Status Changes The Cutoffs
The income lines depend on filing status. Married filing separately can land in a tighter set of tiers when you lived with your spouse at any time during the tax year, which can trigger higher Medicare costs at a lower income level than joint filers.
Use the table below to match your filing status and 2024 MAGI to the 2026 Part B monthly premium you’ll pay.
2026 Part B Premiums By 2024 MAGI
These ranges and totals come from Social Security’s 2026 IRMAA sliding scale tables and related forms that show the same tiers in surcharge format. SSA 2026 IRMAA tables
| Filing Status And 2024 MAGI Range | 2026 Part B Monthly Premium | What This Means |
|---|---|---|
| Single/HOH/QSS: $109,000.01–$137,000 | $284.10 | First IRMAA tier above standard |
| Single/HOH/QSS: $137,000.01–$171,000 | $405.80 | Second IRMAA tier |
| Single/HOH/QSS: $171,000.01–$205,000 | $527.50 | Third IRMAA tier |
| Single/HOH/QSS: $205,000.01–$499,999.99 | $649.20 | Fourth IRMAA tier |
| Single/HOH/QSS: $500,000+ | $689.90 | Top IRMAA tier |
| Married Joint: $218,000.01–$274,000 | $284.10 | First IRMAA tier above standard |
| Married Joint: $274,000.01–$342,000 | $405.80 | Second IRMAA tier |
| Married Joint: $342,000.01–$410,000 | $527.50 | Third IRMAA tier |
| Married Joint: $410,000.01–$749,999.99 | $649.20 | Fourth IRMAA tier |
| Married Joint: $750,000+ | $689.90 | Top IRMAA tier |
| Married Separate (lived with spouse): $109,000.01–$390,999.99 | $649.20 | Higher tier can apply at lower income |
| Married Separate (lived with spouse): $391,000+ | $689.90 | Top tier under this filing status |
How To Find Your IRMAA Number On Your Tax Return
You don’t need a spreadsheet or a paid tool to sanity-check IRMAA. You just need the same parts Social Security uses.
Step 1: Pull Your Two-Year-Old Return
For 2026, start with your 2024 federal return (or your IRS transcript for that year). If that year isn’t available in the system, Social Security may fall back to 2023 data, then update when 2024 arrives.
Step 2: Add AGI And Tax-Exempt Interest
Social Security’s own definition says MAGI for IRMAA is AGI plus tax-exempt interest. That’s the number you compare to the brackets. SSA MAGI formula for IRMAA
Step 3: Match Filing Status
Your filing status in the tax year being used matters as much as the number. A joint return often has wider ranges than married filing separately when you lived with your spouse.
Step 4: Compare To The Bracket Lines, Not Averages
IRMAA works in tiers. If your MAGI is even $1 above a cutoff, you pay the tier amount tied to that range. That’s why it’s worth checking the exact lines rather than relying on a rough estimate.
Part D IRMAA: The Extra Charge That Catches People Off Guard
Part D IRMAA is a monthly add-on that stacks on top of your prescription plan premium. It applies even if you get drug coverage through a Medicare Advantage plan with drug coverage. Social Security lists the Part D add-on amounts in the same income tiers as Part B. SSA Part D IRMAA amounts for 2026
The table below shows the 2026 Part D add-on amounts tied to 2024 MAGI. You pay your plan premium, plus this add-on if your income lands in a surcharge tier.
2026 Part D Monthly IRMAA Add-Ons By 2024 MAGI
| 2024 MAGI Range (Tier Applies By Filing Status) | 2026 Part D Monthly Add-On | How It Shows Up |
|---|---|---|
| $109,000.01–$137,000 (single/HOH/QSS) | $14.50 | Added to your plan premium |
| $137,000.01–$171,000 (single/HOH/QSS) | $37.50 | Added to your plan premium |
| $171,000.01–$205,000 (single/HOH/QSS) | $60.40 | Added to your plan premium |
| $205,000.01–$499,999.99 (single/HOH/QSS) | $83.30 | Added to your plan premium |
| $500,000+ (single/HOH/QSS) | $91.00 | Added to your plan premium |
| $218,000.01–$274,000 (married joint) | $14.50 | Added to your plan premium |
| $274,000.01–$342,000 (married joint) | $37.50 | Added to your plan premium |
| $342,000.01–$410,000 (married joint) | $60.40 | Added to your plan premium |
| $410,000.01–$749,999.99 (married joint) | $83.30 | Added to your plan premium |
| $750,000+ (married joint) | $91.00 | Added to your plan premium |
| $109,000.01–$390,999.99 (married separate, lived with spouse) | $83.30 | Added to your plan premium |
| $391,000+ (married separate, lived with spouse) | $91.00 | Added to your plan premium |
How You Pay IRMAA And Where People Miss It
Part B IRMAA is baked into your monthly Part B premium total. Part D IRMAA is billed as a separate monthly amount even though it’s tied to your drug coverage. Many people expect it to be folded into the plan premium, then get surprised by a separate deduction or bill.
If you get Social Security benefits, the amounts are often deducted from your benefit payment. If you don’t, Social Security can bill you directly.
When The Surcharge Is Wrong For Your Current Life
IRMAA uses old income by design, so “wrong” can mean “your income dropped since that return.” Social Security allows a request for a new determination when you’ve had certain life-changing events that reduce income, like work stoppage, work reduction, divorce, or death of a spouse. The form used for that request is SSA-44. SSA-44 life-changing event request
What To Gather Before You File SSA-44
People get faster results when they send clean proof up front. Typical items include:
- A letter from an employer showing the date work ended or hours dropped
- A pension statement showing a reduction or loss
- A death certificate for a spouse, if that is the trigger
- A copy of the newer tax return or a signed estimate of current-year MAGI
SSA-44 itself spells out that Social Security uses AGI plus tax-exempt interest to measure MAGI and shows the tiered add-on amounts tied to those ranges. SSA-44 IRMAA table
Common Income Items That Push MAGI Over A Line
IRMAA isn’t based on “wages only.” It’s based on MAGI from the tax return, so a few items can be the hidden drivers.
Large IRA Distributions And RMDs
Required minimum distributions increase taxable income and can stack with other items in the same year. If your RMD year lines up with a capital gain or a one-time payout, that combo can lift MAGI into a higher tier.
Capital Gains From Selling Investments
Selling appreciated stock, a mutual fund distribution, or a business stake can add a big chunk of income in a single year. That can trigger IRMAA two years later even if the sale is a one-off.
Tax-Exempt Interest
Municipal bond interest may be free of federal income tax, yet Social Security still counts it in the MAGI number used for IRMAA. That single detail catches plenty of retirees. The MAGI definition that drives IRMAA includes tax-exempt interest by rule. SSA MAGI rule including tax-exempt interest
Roth Conversions
Moving money from a pre-tax IRA to a Roth IRA increases taxable income in the conversion year. That can raise Medicare premiums two years later. Some people still choose it because it can reduce future RMDs, yet the timing matters when you’re close to a bracket line.
A Simple Checklist To Predict Next Year’s Medicare Premium Tier
If you want a quick way to spot trouble before it hits, run this once a year after you have a solid income estimate:
- Estimate current-year AGI.
- Add estimated tax-exempt interest.
- Mark your expected filing status.
- Compare the total to the nearest IRMAA bracket edge.
- If you’re near a line, consider delaying income you control into a later year, or spreading it across two years, when that fits your tax plan.
Even if you don’t change anything, the exercise helps you avoid surprises and plan cash flow for the year your premiums rise.
Where To Verify Your Numbers
Medicare and Social Security publish the official amounts and rules each year. If you want to double-check what you’ll pay in 2026, start with the official Part B premium release and the IRMAA tier tables:
- The standard Part B premium for 2026: CMS 2026 premiums and deductibles
- The full income-tier chart for 2026: SSA 2026 IRMAA sliding scale tables
- The MAGI definition used for IRMAA: SSA MAGI definition
- The life-changing event process and worksheet tiers: SSA-44
If you take one thing from this page, make it this: Medicare premium increases aren’t random. They’re tier-based, tied to a two-year-old MAGI number, and triggered by clear bracket lines. Once you know your number and your filing status, you can predict the tier with confidence.
References & Sources
- Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).“2026 Medicare Parts A & B Premiums and Deductibles.”Confirms the 2026 standard Part B premium amount used before any IRMAA tier applies.
- Social Security Administration (SSA) POMS.“HI 01101.020 – IRMAA Sliding Scale Tables.”Lists the official 2026 income tiers and the resulting Part B premiums and Part D add-on amounts.
- Social Security Administration (SSA) POMS.“HI 01101.010 – Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI).”Defines the MAGI formula Social Security uses for IRMAA: AGI plus tax-exempt interest.
- Social Security Administration (SSA).“SSA-44: Medicare Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount – Life-Changing Event.”Explains how to request a new determination after qualifying life changes and shows the tiered IRMAA add-ons.
