You better start writing off some of that income from your rental property.
But real spill, it's a lot for a single person to pay, but if it were a family it'd be a good deal.
i'm not sure, looking at the coverage offered at my job, a family of 4 pays ~60/month toward their premium. and if this is a young healthy family, parents go for a couple annual check ups - that's $40 in co pays, kids might add 160 in co pays, 500 for random prescriptions, preventive dental is would be at no cost...that's less than $2000 a year in medical bills - again, for average care, of course this can shoot up if you have major medical issues/events or need major dental work/orthodontics
That's a tough sell...I know I've been lucky to work at companies that offer good plans and have paid the whole premium for the policy holder, but 7-10,000 a year is a lot to come up off of when you can look at your past medical bills and not have ever come close to spending that, even as a family
edit: yea, 4% tax for M4A + CA taxes, + his inevitable Fed tax hike....
Really? What's the average yearly health costs for the upper class american?
i pay nothing toward my health & dental coverage premiums, i may see a doc 1-3 times a year $10-co pay for GP, $20 co-pay for specialist - so let's just say $60 in co-pays, i spend about $50-70 on scripts, dental cleanings are free, i may pay 70-200 for some labs
so on a high side with lots of visits and scripts, i'd pay $750 out of pocket for care....now i'm supposed to pay nearly 10x that (would actually be 14x that if i didn't finesse my rental income). really, how do you sell that to a healthy upper income person?