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Healthcare Costs in Retirement: What Select Medical Holdings Employees Need to Plan For

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The Assumption Most Select Medical Holdings Employees Make

When Select Medical Holdings employees approach retirement, many assume that once they reach Medicare age, healthcare costs become manageable. Medicare helps, supplemental coverage helps, and savings provide a cushion. For routine healthcare, that is often true.

But serious health events tell a different story. A major illness, a significant accident, or a prolonged need for daily care can generate costs that go well beyond what Medicare and standard insurance are designed to cover. When that happens, the financial impact can be severe, even for Select Medical Holdings employees who spent decades building savings and doing most things right.

At The Retirement Group, this is why the planning process does not just focus on average outcomes. Retirement plans are stress-tested against realistic worst-case healthcare scenarios, because those scenarios are not as rare as Select Medical Holdings employees assume.

Where the Gaps Actually Appear

Medicare is a valuable foundation, but it was never designed to eliminate financial exposure entirely. The gaps that create the most pressure tend to fall into a few consistent categories.

Long-term care is the largest. When someone needs daily assistance with basic activities, whether at home, in an assisted living facility, or in a nursing home, the costs can run into thousands of dollars per month. Standard Medicare covers only limited skilled nursing care following a hospital stay, not the extended personal care that many Select Medical Holdings employees eventually need.

Home health assistance is similar. If someone needs ongoing help at home after a significant health event, the cost of that support adds up quickly and is largely out of pocket.

Specialized treatment often requires travel to medical centers, extended stays near those facilities, and lengthy recovery periods. Those costs are real and significant, even when the medical treatment itself is covered.

Home modifications after an accident or diagnosis can add another layer of expense. Structural changes to accommodate mobility needs are rarely covered by insurance.

The pattern that shows up consistently in retirement planning is not that Select Medical Holdings employees made poor decisions. It is that they underestimated how large these costs can become when multiple needs arise at the same time.

Why Planning for Difficult Scenarios Matters

A retirement plan built around average healthcare outcomes looks very different from one built around realistic worst-case scenarios. A sound approach asks the harder questions early:

What happens financially if one spouse needs years of assisted care?

What does the plan look like if a serious illness requires specialized treatment over multiple years?

What if healthcare costs grow faster than the general rate of inflation?

What happens if one partner lives significantly longer than projected?

These are uncomfortable questions. But building a plan that accounts for them creates resilience. As Brent Wolf of The Retirement Group often tells Select Medical Holdings employees, planning for the worst case does not mean expecting it. It means being financially resilient if it happens.

The Emotional Dimension of Healthcare Planning

The financial pressure of a serious health event does not only come from the bills. It comes from the decisions families have to make while already under enormous stress.

When medical costs become overwhelming, Select Medical Holdings employees and their families face choices they never expected: whether to sell a home, whether they can afford specialized care, how long savings will last, and who takes on the role of primary caregiver. None of those conversations is easy, and they become harder when financial uncertainty is part of the picture.

A retirement plan that includes a realistic healthcare buffer does not prevent illness. But it reduces the financial stress that compounds a medical crisis.

Building Healthcare Resilience Into Your Retirement Plan

For Select Medical Holdings employees, the practical steps come down to a few key areas.

Understand what Medicare covers and, more importantly, what it does not. The gaps between Medicare coverage and actual care costs are where most Select Medical Holdings employees are surprised.

Consider long-term care coverage. Whether through a dedicated policy, a hybrid life insurance product, or self-insurance through dedicated reserves, having a plan for extended care is one of the most important decisions a Select Medical Holdings employee can make.

Model healthcare costs at a higher inflation rate than general inflation. Healthcare costs historically rise faster than the overall consumer price index, and that gap compounds significantly over a long retirement.

Build flexibility into the retirement income plan so that a significant healthcare expense does not force immediate cuts to everything else.

Healthcare planning is not a separate conversation from retirement planning. It is the same conversation. The Select Medical Holdings employees who are most secure in their later years are the ones who planned for healthcare costs with the same seriousness they brought to planning their investment portfolio.

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For Select Medical Holdings employees, healthcare planning is not a separate conversation from retirement planning. It is the same conversation. The costs are predictable in their unpredictability, and the families who build real financial resilience into their retirement plans are the ones who planned for healthcare with the same seriousness they brought to everything else.

Select Medical Holdings's health plan design significantly impacts retirement healthcare costs. The HDHP combined with a Health Savings Account (HSA) offers triple tax advantages: contributions are pre-tax, growth is tax-free, and qualified medical withdrawals are tax-free. The 2026 HSA limits are $4,400 for individual coverage and $8,750 for family coverage. If Select Medical Holdings seeds HSA accounts with $400 individual / $800 family, employees receive immediate purchasing power for healthcare. HSA balances roll over year-to-year (unlike FSAs) and can be invested for long-term growth, making them powerful retirement healthcare savings vehicles. Starting contributions early and minimizing HSA withdrawals during working years can accumulate substantial reserves for Medicare-eligible years.

Without retiree medical, Medicare becomes the foundation of retirement healthcare. Employees should enroll in Medicare Parts A and B at 65 and carefully evaluate supplement (Medigap) or Medicare Advantage plans. Delayed enrollment penalties apply, so timely enrollment is critical. Long-term care planning (nursing facilities, assisted living, home care) often exceeds Medicare and health insurance coverage. Exploring long-term care insurance options during working years—while still insurable—protects retirement savings from catastrophic healthcare costs.

What is the 401(k) plan offered by Select Medical Holdings?

The 401(k) plan offered by Select Medical Holdings is a retirement savings plan that allows employees to save a portion of their paycheck before taxes are taken out.

Does Select Medical Holdings match employee contributions to the 401(k) plan?

Yes, Select Medical Holdings provides a matching contribution to employee 401(k) accounts, subject to certain limits and conditions.

What is the eligibility requirement to participate in Select Medical Holdings' 401(k) plan?

Employees of Select Medical Holdings are typically eligible to participate in the 401(k) plan after completing a specified period of service, as outlined in the plan documents.

How can employees of Select Medical Holdings enroll in the 401(k) plan?

Employees can enroll in the Select Medical Holdings 401(k) plan by completing the enrollment process through the designated online portal or by contacting the HR department for assistance.

What types of investment options are available in the Select Medical Holdings 401(k) plan?

The Select Medical Holdings 401(k) plan offers a variety of investment options, including mutual funds, target-date funds, and other investment vehicles, allowing employees to choose based on their risk tolerance.

Can employees of Select Medical Holdings take loans against their 401(k) savings?

Yes, Select Medical Holdings allows employees to take loans against their 401(k) savings, subject to the terms and conditions of the plan.

What happens to the 401(k) plan if an employee leaves Select Medical Holdings?

If an employee leaves Select Medical Holdings, they have several options for their 401(k) savings, including rolling over the balance into an IRA or a new employer's plan.

Are there any fees associated with the Select Medical Holdings 401(k) plan?

Yes, there may be administrative fees and investment-related fees associated with the Select Medical Holdings 401(k) plan, which are disclosed in the plan documents.

How often can employees change their contribution rates to the Select Medical Holdings 401(k) plan?

Employees can typically change their contribution rates to the Select Medical Holdings 401(k) plan at any time, subject to the plan's guidelines.

Does Select Medical Holdings provide financial education regarding the 401(k) plan?

Yes, Select Medical Holdings offers resources and financial education to help employees make informed decisions about their 401(k) savings and investments.

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For more information you can reach the plan administrator for Select Medical Holdings at , ; or by calling them at .

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