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Harris wants to forgive medical debt for millions of Americans

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Vice President Kamala Harris addresses the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024.

Tom Williams | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

Vice President Kamala Harris wants to forgive medical debt for millions of Americans.

The economic plan Harris rolled out last week notes that the Democratic presidential nominee and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, would work with states to relieve people of their medical debt and “to help them avoid accumulating such debt in the future, because no one should go bankrupt just because they had the misfortune of becoming sick or hurt.”

Some 15 million Americans have medical bills on their credit reports, according to Consumer Financial Protection Bureau research published in April. People in the U.S. owe at least $220 billion in medical debt, a February KFF analysis found.

“Medical debt affects an enormous number of people, so it’s an issue that resonates with voters,” said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF.

How medical debt became normal in the U.S.

Indeed, 51% of adults say it is extremely or very important for the federal government to forgive medical debt, compared with 39% who said the same about student loan debt, according to a May poll conducted by the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. The groups surveyed 1,309 adults.

“Vice President Harris may see student loan forgiveness and medical debt forgiveness as both addressing inequities that prevent people from achieving the American dream,” said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz.

The Harris campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

Former President Donald Trump hasn’t come out with a medical debt cancellation proposal, but as president he pushed for more price transparency for patients and to curb surprise medical bills.

The Trump administration also tried but failed to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Overturning even portions of that law would lead to more Americans becoming uninsured and higher premium costs for policyholders, according to an estimate by the Congressional Budget office.

Harris differentiates herself with focus on medical debt

By coming out with a medical debt forgiveness plan, Harris may be looking to differentiate herself from President Joe Biden and his student debt efforts, said Braxton Brewington, press secretary for the Debt Collective, an organization that advocates for debt cancellation.

Biden has forgiven more student debt than any other president.

“She has the freedom to move into another space,” Brewington said, adding that Harris would likely continue Biden’s work on student debt, as well.

“I’m sure she’ll do both,” he said.

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The American health-care system has long been on Harris’ radar.

As a presidential candidate in 2020, Harris pushed for a version of Medicare For All, a plan she no longer backs as she shifts to the center of her party. But Harris continued to show a concern with health-care costs as vice president, leading a White House effort in June to clear medical bills from Americans’ credit reports.

This focus may come, in part, from her own experience.

In a 2019 interview with late activist Ady Barkan, Harris described the day her mother informed her she had cancer.

“My mother, she said to my sister and me, ‘I want to meet you guys for lunch,’ and she showed up at the restaurant wearing makeup — my mother never wore makeup, and her hair was blow dried,” Harris said, tearing up. “She took our hands, and she’d said she’d been diagnosed with colon cancer.

“That was one of the worst days of my life, truly.”

That families experiencing this “would also have to worry about how to pay the bills,” Harris told Barkan was “just inhumane.”

Harris’s mother, who was a cancer researcher, died in 2009 at 70.

How medical debt could be canceled

Harris’ economic plan didn’t include specific details on how the medical debt jubilee would happen, but experts say an investment by the government would go far.

“Amazingly, medical debt can be bought from collection agencies for a penny on the dollar, a reflection of the fact that so few people can afford to pay their overdue medical bills,” KFF’s Levitt said.

Allison Sesso, president and chief executive officer of Undue Medical Debt, a nonprofit that partners with local governments to cancel people’s medical debts, said the group can usually wipe out around $1,000 of the debt for every $10. It often buys the debt directly from hospitals, Sesso said.

States, counties and cities across the U.S. are already using funds from the American Rescue Plan passed during the Covid pandemic to purchase and eliminate around $7 billion in medical debt for roughly 3 million Americans by the end of 2026. As many as 1 million residents in Arizona could benefit, for example, and 400,000 people in New Jersey, according to the White House.

Medical debt affects an enormous number of people, so it’s an issue that resonates with voters.

Larry Levitt

executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation

Recent research has raised some doubts about the benefits of forgiving medical debt. The relief has no impact on people’s mental health, credit access or financial distress, according to a National Bureau of Economic Research study published in April.

Experts say this may be due in part to the fact that, beginning last year, the major credit reporting companies cleared most medical collections under $500 from people’s records. Those past-due bills are now less likely to affect people’s credit. Harris is now trying to get even more, if not all, medical debts off people’s credit reports.

However, Sesso said Undue Medical Debt hears from people all the time about how canceling their medical debt improved their lives. In extreme cases, unpaid medical bills can lead to wage garnishments and seized assets, she said.

Frequently, people who still owe a hospital or doctor a bill will avoid necessary treatments, she said.

“People don’t go back to the doctor because they feel they’ll be asked for the bill,” Sesso said. “And then the problem gets worse, and the interventions much more expensive.”

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Personal Finance

Missing quarterly tax payment could trigger ‘unexpected penalties’

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Israel Sebastian | Moment | Getty Images

The fourth-quarter estimated tax deadline for 2024 is Jan. 15, and missing a payment could trigger “unexpected penalties and fees” when filing your return, according to the IRS.

Typically, estimated taxes apply to income without withholdings, such as earnings from freelance work, a small business or investments. But you could still owe taxes for full-time or retirement income if you didn’t withhold enough.

You could also owe fourth-quarter taxes for year-end bonuses, stock dividends, capital gains from mutual fund payouts or profits from crypto sales and more, the IRS said.    

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Federal income taxes are “pay as you go,” meaning the IRS expects payments throughout the year as you make income, said certified public accountant Brian Long, senior tax advisor at Wealth Enhancement in Minneapolis. 

If you miss the Jan. 15 deadline, you may incur an interest-based penalty based on the current interest rate and how much you should have paid. That penalty compounds daily.

Tax withholdings, estimated payments or a combination of the two, can “help avoid a surprise tax bill at tax time,” according to the IRS.

What to know about the ‘safe harbor’ rules

However, you could still owe taxes for 2024 if you make more than expected and don’t adjust your tax payments.

“The good thing about this last quarterly payment is that most individuals should have their year-end numbers finalized,” said Sheneya Wilson, a CPA and founder of Fola Financial in New York.

How to make quarterly estimated tax payments

Tax Tip: Child Credit

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Personal Finance

California wildfire relief: Where to give

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Firefighters work as a brush fire burns in Pacific Palisades, California on Jan. 7, 2025.

David Swanson | AFP | Getty Images

Massive wildfires are devastating the Los Angeles area of Southern California. As of Thursday morning, at least five people were killed, more than 100,000 residents have been ordered to evacuate and nearly 2,000 homes and businesses were destroyed.

Many people around the country, and world, want to help, whether by donating money or emergency supplies. However, there are already fundraising scams trying to capitalize on the crisis.

To make sure your funds get into the right hands, third-party evaluator Charity Navigator compiled a list of highly rated nonprofits currently engaged in relief and recovery efforts in the Pacific Palisades and the surrounding areas — including support for first responders. 

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“We’ve vetted the organizations that are there,” said Michael Thatcher, CEO of Charity Navigator. “These are all outstanding.”

Here are some of the groups that earned high marks from the organization for providing immediate support to the victims of the wildfires and wildfire-affected communities.

How to avoid wildfire-related scams

The BBB Wise Giving Alliance also offers tips for donating to the California wildfire relief efforts.

It recommends donors check whether a charity is accredited and take extra precautions on crowdfunding sites, including reviewing how postings are screened as well what transaction fees may apply.

In addition, be wary of relief appeals that have vague descriptions or do not explain what programs your support will assist.

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New Social Security increases may prompt higher tax bills, Medicare premiums

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Nearly 3 million individuals are poised to see their Social Security benefits increase, thanks to new changes signed into law by President Joe Biden this week. But with the higher checks could come additional tax burdens.

The Social Security Fairness Act — which passed by a bipartisan majority in both the House and Senate — ends reductions of Social Security benefits for certain individuals who also receive pension income from work in the public sector as firefighters, police officers, teachers and local, state and federal employees.

Those beneficiaries are set to see an increase to their monthly benefit checks. Because the legislation applies to benefits paid throughout 2024, they will also receive lump-sum payments to make up for that time.

The details of how those increases will be implemented are now being determined, according to the Social Security Administration.

In total, the benefit increases will cost $196 billion over a decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The additional outlay will move Social Security’s trust fund depletion dates six months closer. The program’s combined trust funds may pay full benefits until 2035, at which point just 83% of scheduled benefits may be payable, the program’s trustees projected last year.

How Social Security benefits may change

About 2.1 million beneficiaries — those who were affected by the Windfall Elimination Provision, or WEP — may see $360 more in monthly benefits on average, according to CBO estimates as of December 2025. The WEP, which has now been eliminated, reduced Social Security benefits for workers who also had pension or disability benefits from jobs where they did not pay Social Security payroll taxes.

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Additionally, about 380,000 spouses would see average benefit increases of $700 and 390,000 surviving spouses would see an average of $1,190 more, according to CBO’s estimates for December 2025.

Those beneficiaries were affected by the now-defunct Government Pension Offset, or GPO, which reduced Social Security benefits for spouses, widows and widowers who also receive their own pensions from public sector work.

The elimination of the provisions in many ways simplifies retirement income planning for affected beneficiaries, financial advisors say.

“For the people who are affected by this, you’re looking at a pretty significant increase, in many cases, of what their retirement income is going to be,” said Michael Daley, director of marketing at HealthView Services. “It’s good news for them.”

For financial planners and their clients, the challenge now is gauging how much of a benefit increase to expect and when to expect it, said Joe Elsasser, founder and president of Covisum, a Social Security claiming software company.

The extra income may also present some complications when it comes to affected beneficiaries’ taxes and Medicare premiums, experts say.

Beneficiaries could see higher taxes on benefits

Maximizing your Social Security benefits

Individuals pay taxes on up to 50% of their benefits if their combined income is between $25,000 and $34,000, or for married couples with between $32,000 and $44,000.

Individuals may pay taxes on up to 85% of their benefits if their combined income is more than $34,000; or for married couples with more than $44,000.

“Because Social Security benefits are taxed differently than everything else, people are going to really want to pay attention to their other sources of income,” Elsasser said of the anticipated benefit increases and lump sum payments.

For example, if a retiree has both a taxable account and traditional individual retirement account, they may want to prioritize withdrawals from the taxable account because only the gains would be taxed rather than the entire withdrawal, Elsasser explained. In the event the lump-sum payment of retroactive Social Security benefits is not distributed, they may take an IRA withdrawal later in the year.

Beneficiaries may see higher Medicare costs

Additional benefit income for individuals affected by the Social Security Fairness Act may also result in higher income-based surcharges for Medicare Parts B and D.

Medicare beneficiaries with higher incomes must pay what’s known as income-related monthly adjustment amounts, or IRMAAs, for their Part B and Part D premiums.

“If you get a lump sum but you’re not paying attention to your other incomes, you could unwittingly be pushed into higher Medicare premiums two years down the road,” Elsasser said.

That will mostly be a concern for people who are on the cusp of the income thresholds, he said.

In 2025, Medicare Part B beneficiaries who file individual tax returns with $106,000 or less in modified adjusted gross income — or married couples who file jointly with $212,000 or less — pay a standard monthly premium of $185 per month.

Beneficiaries above those income thresholds pay higher Part B premium payments, based on an IRMAA. This year’s rates are based on income on tax returns filed in 2023.

In 2025, Part D beneficiaries over the $106,000 threshold for individuals and $212,000 for married couples are also subject to income-related monthly adjustment amounts in addition to their plan premiums. Those monthly premiums are also based on yearly income reported on tax filings for 2023. In 2025, the national base Part D premium is $36.78.

Steps to take now

Beneficiaries who are affected by the Social Security Fairness Act should consider consulting with a financial advisor to assess the implications of the change on their personal financial circumstances, said Ron Mastrogiovanni, chairman and CEO of HealthView Services.

Additionally, it would help to sit down with a certified public accountant when filing their taxes to plan for 2025, he said.

The Social Security Administration also plans to provide more guidance on the new law as more details become available.

For now, the agency recommends verifying that direct deposit and mailing address it has on file is still accurate. To update that information, the Social Security recommends changing it online or calling or visiting a Social Security office in person.

Some individuals may now become eligible for Social Security benefits for the first time, now that the WEP and GPO provisions have been eliminated.

To file for benefits, the Social Security Administration recommends either filing online or scheduling an appointment with the agency.

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