You have spent decades building toward retirement. You hit 62, Social Security is available, your savings look solid, and you are ready. Then a single question stops you cold: what about health insurance? Medicare does not start until 65, and that three-year gap is where early retirement dreams go to die — or at least get very expensive. This is your complete guide to navigating every viable option during the most dangerous financial gap in the American retirement system.

$7,000-$15,000 average annual health insurance cost for pre-Medicare retirees, depending on plan type, location, and subsidy eligibility. — Kaiser Family Foundation, 2025

The Coverage Gap Problem

The math is brutal. You can claim Social Security at 62. You can access 401(k) and IRA funds penalty-free at 59½. But Medicare eligibility does not begin until the month you turn 65. That creates a gap of up to 36 months where you need health insurance and have no government program to provide it.

If you had employer-sponsored health insurance, your employer was likely paying 70-80% of the premium. The moment you retire, that subsidy disappears. A plan that cost you $200 per month as an employee now costs $600-$1,500 per month at full price — and that is for one person. Couples can face $12,000-$30,000 per year.

1 in 4 early retirees cite health insurance as their single biggest financial challenge — ahead of investment returns or spending control. — Employee Benefit Research Institute, 2024

Going uninsured is not a realistic option. A single hospital stay averages $13,262. A heart attack runs $123,000-$200,000. Cancer treatment can exceed $150,000 per year. At 62-65, these are not hypothetical risks — they are statistically common events that can wipe out a lifetime of savings in weeks.

Do Not Go Uninsured Even if you are healthy at 62, going without health insurance is a catastrophic financial risk. One unexpected diagnosis or accident can deplete decades of retirement savings. Every option below — even the expensive ones — is better than no coverage.

Option 1: COBRA Continuation Coverage

COBRA (Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act) lets you keep your employer's exact health plan after you leave your job. Same doctors, same network, same coverage. The catch: you now pay the entire premium yourself, plus a 2% administrative fee.

How it works:

  • Available if your employer had 20 or more employees
  • You have 60 days after leaving your job to elect COBRA
  • Coverage lasts a maximum of 18 months — not the 36 months you need
  • You pay 100% of the premium plus a 2% admin fee
  • Average cost: $650-$750 per month for individuals, $1,800-$2,100 per month for families

When COBRA makes sense: You are mid-treatment with a specialist in your employer's network. You have a surgery scheduled within the next few months. You need continuity of care for a complex condition. You are within 18 months of turning 65 and want to keep your current doctors.

When it does not: You have more than 18 months until Medicare. You are healthy and want the most affordable option. Your employer's plan was already expensive with a high employee contribution.

Pro Tip You can elect COBRA retroactively within 60 days. Some retirees wait to see if they need medical care in those first two months — if they do, they elect COBRA and it covers them retroactively to day one. If they stay healthy, they let the deadline pass and go directly to an ACA plan. This is legal but risky: if you have an emergency on day 61, you are uninsured.

Option 2: ACA Marketplace Plans

For most early retirees, the Affordable Care Act Marketplace is the strongest option. It is the only path that cannot deny you for pre-existing conditions, must cover all essential health benefits, and offers income-based premium subsidies that can dramatically reduce your costs.

How subsidies work: ACA premium tax credits are based on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI). As a retiree, you have significant control over your MAGI because you choose how much to withdraw from retirement accounts, when to realize capital gains, and whether to do Roth conversions.

The Silver Loading advantage: In many states, insurers load the cost of Cost-Sharing Reductions (CSRs) onto Silver-tier plans only. This makes Silver plans artificially expensive relative to Gold plans. Your subsidy is calculated based on the inflated Silver price, but you can apply that generous subsidy to a Gold plan — often getting better coverage for less money. This is sometimes called the "Silver Switcheroo," and it can save you $100-$300 per month.

Key facts for early retirees:

  • Losing employer coverage is a qualifying life event — you get a 60-day Special Enrollment Period
  • No income ceiling for subsidy eligibility (through at least 2025 under the Inflation Reduction Act extension)
  • All plans must cover prescriptions, mental health, preventive care, and hospitalization
  • You cannot be denied for pre-existing conditions
  • Cost with subsidies: as low as $50-$300 per month depending on income and location
Pro Tip: Roth Conversions and ACA Subsidies If you retire at 62 with a large traditional IRA, consider doing Roth conversions in years before you retire — while your income is high and you have employer insurance. Once retired, keep your MAGI low (under $30,000-$40,000 for an individual) and live on Roth withdrawals plus taxable savings, which do not count toward MAGI. This strategy can reduce your ACA premium to near zero while also reducing future Required Minimum Distributions.

Option 3: Spouse's Employer Plan

If your spouse is still working and has employer-sponsored health insurance, this is often the simplest and most affordable path. Most employer plans allow you to be added as a dependent during open enrollment or within 30 days of losing your own coverage.

Advantages:

  • Employer typically subsidizes 70-80% of the premium
  • No income test or eligibility restrictions
  • Usually includes dental and vision options
  • Your cost: typically $200-$500 per month to add a spouse

Important consideration: If your spouse retires or changes jobs before you turn 65, you lose this coverage and must find an alternative within 60 days. Have a backup plan ready before that happens.

Option 4: Health Sharing Ministries

Health sharing ministries (like Medi-Share, Christian Healthcare Ministries, and Samaritan Ministries) are not insurance. They are organizations where members contribute to share each other's medical costs. Monthly "shares" range from $200-$500 per person.

Critical Limitations of Health Sharing Ministries Health sharing ministries are not insurance and are not regulated by state insurance departments. They can deny claims for pre-existing conditions (typically excluded for the first 1-3 years), impose annual or per-incident caps, exclude mental health and substance abuse treatment entirely, and have no legal obligation to pay your claims. Many also exclude conditions related to tobacco use, obesity, or lifestyle choices the organization deems inconsistent with its guidelines.

When it might work: You are in excellent health with no pre-existing conditions, you want a lower monthly cost and are willing to accept higher risk, and you have substantial savings to self-insure against coverage gaps.

When to avoid it: You have any pre-existing condition — diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, prior cancer, or chronic pain. You take ongoing prescription medications. You cannot afford an uncovered $50,000-$100,000 medical event.

Option 5: Short-Term Health Plans

Short-term health insurance plans offer limited coverage for 3-12 months (up to 36 months with renewals in some states). Premiums are low — $100-$300 per month — but the coverage is thin.

Short-Term Plans Do Not Cover Pre-Existing Conditions If you have diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, prior cancer, asthma, arthritis, or virtually any condition diagnosed before the plan starts, none of the costs related to that condition will be covered. These plans are designed for young, healthy people between jobs — not for 62-year-olds with decades of medical history.

What short-term plans typically exclude:

  • Pre-existing conditions (any condition diagnosed or treated in the prior 2-5 years)
  • Prescription drugs (or extremely limited formularies)
  • Mental health and substance abuse treatment
  • Preventive care (no free annual checkups or cancer screenings)
  • Maternity care

Several states — including California, Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey — have banned short-term plans entirely because of their limited coverage and consumer complaints.

Cost Comparison: All Five Options

The following table compares typical costs and coverage for a 63-year-old individual in a mid-cost state. Your actual costs will vary by location, health status, and income level.

Option Monthly Cost Coverage Level Rx Coverage Pre-Existing Conditions
COBRA $650-$750 Same as employer plan Full Fully covered
ACA Marketplace $50-$600* Bronze to Platinum tiers Full Fully covered
Spouse's Plan $200-$500 Employer plan level Full Fully covered
Health Sharing $200-$500 Variable / limited Limited or none Excluded 1-3 years
Short-Term $100-$300 Catastrophic only Limited or none Not covered

*ACA cost depends heavily on income and subsidy eligibility. A retiree with $25,000 MAGI may pay under $100/month; one with $80,000 MAGI may pay $500-$600/month before subsidies reduce the premium.

The Medicare Countdown: Enrollment Timeline

As you approach 65, Medicare enrollment has strict deadlines. Missing them triggers permanent premium penalties that last for the rest of your life.

When What to Do
12 months before 65 Research Medicare Advantage vs. Original Medicare + Medigap supplement. Compare plans in your area at Medicare.gov.
7 months before 65 Your Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) begins 3 months before your 65th birthday month. Enroll in Medicare Parts A and B.
Your birthday month Middle of your IEP. Part A (hospital) is free with 40+ quarters of work history. Part B (outpatient) costs $185/month in 2026 (standard premium).
3 months after 65 End of your IEP. Missing this deadline without qualifying employer coverage triggers a 10% Part B premium penalty for each 12-month period you were eligible but not enrolled — for life.
Within 6 months of Part B Your Medigap Open Enrollment Period. Buy any Medigap supplemental policy without medical underwriting. After this window, insurers can deny you or charge more based on health.
Pro Tip Set calendar reminders 12 months and 7 months before your 65th birthday. The IEP is your most important enrollment window. Missing it does not just delay your coverage — it permanently increases your Part B premium by 10% for every full year you were late. A two-year delay means a 20% surcharge on every Part B premium for the rest of your life.

ACA Subsidy Strategy: Estimate Your Premium

Your ACA premium after subsidies depends almost entirely on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income. As an early retiree, you have more control over this number than you ever did as an employee. Use the estimator below to see how income level affects your monthly premium.

ACA Subsidy Estimator

Enter your expected annual retirement income to see your estimated monthly ACA premium after subsidies. Estimates are based on 2025-2026 benchmark Silver plan rates for a 63-year-old individual.



This is a simplified estimate for educational purposes only. Actual premiums vary by state, county, age, tobacco use, and plan selection. Visit Healthcare.gov for precise quotes.

Income strategies to maximize your subsidy:

  • Live on Roth withdrawals: Roth IRA and Roth 401(k) distributions do not count as MAGI. If you converted funds to Roth before retiring, you can live on these tax-free dollars while keeping your reportable income low.
  • Time your capital gains: Selling appreciated stock or funds increases your MAGI. Spread large sales across multiple tax years, or harvest losses to offset gains in the same year.
  • Delay Social Security: Social Security benefits count toward MAGI (at least partially). If you can afford to wait until 65 or later to claim, you keep your MAGI lower during your ACA bridge years and get a permanently higher monthly benefit later.
  • Be precise with income planning: ACA subsidies shift at certain income thresholds relative to the Federal Poverty Level. Going even $1 over a threshold can cost thousands in lost subsidies. Work with a tax advisor who understands ACA premium planning.

The Bottom Line

The health insurance gap between 62 and 65 is the most underestimated cost in early retirement planning. For most people, an ACA Marketplace plan with strategically managed income is the best bridge to Medicare. It offers comprehensive coverage, cannot deny you for pre-existing conditions, and premium subsidies can reduce your cost to a fraction of the unsubsidized rate. COBRA works well for short transitions under 18 months, and a spouse's employer plan is the easiest path when available. Health sharing ministries and short-term plans carry risks that outweigh their lower premiums for most people in this age group.

The single most important step you can take: plan your health insurance strategy before you submit your resignation. Run the numbers on ACA subsidies at different income levels. Consult a free health insurance navigator through Healthcare.gov. Set those Medicare enrollment reminders for when you approach 65. Three years of health insurance is a total investment of $20,000-$45,000 — substantial, but small compared to the cost of a single uninsured hospitalization that can run six figures. The gap is real, but with the right plan, it is entirely manageable.