Financial pressure in the senior years has specific characteristics — and specific relief programs designed for exactly this population.
Fixed-Income Financial Challenges
Fixed-income households — retirees and others whose primary income is from Social Security, pensions, or retirement accounts that do not increase with inflation — face financial pressure that differs from working-age households. Expenses, particularly healthcare and housing, continue rising while income does not. Emergency expenses draw from savings that cannot be quickly replenished. The relief strategies that work for working-age households do not always translate directly to fixed-income situations.
Senior-Specific Benefit Programs
Multiple benefit programs are specifically designed for the financial challenges of older adults. Medicare’s Extra Help (Low Income Subsidy) provides prescription drug cost assistance for qualifying Medicare beneficiaries. Medicare Savings Programs reduce or eliminate Medicare Part B premiums. SNAP benefits are available to income-qualifying seniors. Senior Property Tax Freeze programs in many states limit property tax increases for qualifying older homeowners. These programs collectively provide thousands of dollars per year in potential benefit to qualifying seniors who apply.
Area Agency on Aging
Every U.S. region has an Area Agency on Aging that provides comprehensive services and benefit connection assistance for older adults. Services include benefits counseling, in-home assistance, nutrition programs, transportation, and legal assistance. Contact the Eldercare Locator at 1-800-677-1116 or eldercare.acl.gov to find your local Area Agency on Aging and the services available in your area.
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