As stated above you will have a Medicare/Medicaid impact to getting married. But there can be tax benefits to being married, typically when one partner makes considerably more money than the other. I suppose the benefits are more helpful to people in a higher tax bracket. As you figure out your life together, taking the tax advantages of marriage into consideration might take a little pressure off your budget.
Okay People on this thread... How is an income tax going to offset the HIGH expenses of continuous medical treatments and unexpected emergency treatments?! If I get back a lousy $2,000 a year or even a higher tax bracket and get a $10,000 return how is that going to cover the 20% that Medicare wont pay when medicaid drops you as a client for having too much of a combined yearly income. Once again a STANDARD CF TUNEUP(for a 2 week stay, 10g's a day) is literally 120-140grand base cost per hospital stay without specialty circumstances as that is even extra. Do we have $28,000 a year to blow per visit on out of pocket medical coverage?... now that I'm older I go in 3 to 4 times a year, do we have $112,000 per year to cover the 20%, is a tax return going to be viable yearly?.. especially when you are on disability you get no return!
Then there is Disability that
most CFer's end up on. If you're lucky enough to have earned enough "yearly points" working at a jobs over the years lets say from age 16 to 32 you might end up with what I get around $1,200 a month Soc. Sec. Disability Income(SSDI)[which I'm being penalized for overworking putting me slightly over the poverty level](the State doesn't fight fair only in Black and White). If you are not lucky enough to even qualify for SSDI because the State says you can't prove you are debilitating then you will have to lawyer up and cross your fingers and pay out to a lawyer some of the money that should be yours. So If you are sick too many times a year and can't hold down a job steadily your point system will lower and if you do qualify for SSDI you might end up with luckily $600-700 a month but the good part is you will be in the poverty level and the state will pick up that extra 20% assuming you don't have a house or nice car first or a nice savings account
OR ARE MARRIED raising your income.
If you Can't qualify for SSDI then even worse you will end up on welfare where they will give you like 80bux in food stamps and maybe $300 a month to live on until your lawyer wins your case.
Okay so we know the government deals in Black and White and LITERALLY counts your income to the dollar even cent, they will assist you but
if you MARRY someone like I said your Black & White outlook changes. It drives me wild to see all the comments being made on this post "Talk to a Lawyer", "talk to a Social Worker," "Rely on income tax returns," "look into diff. insurance programs"... I'm giving you the playbook w/o sugarcoating it, and the simple truth is
Marriage is not for CFer's unless you have a cool couple million TO BLOW on medical expenses outside of your assets, and even at that 2million might not be enough...
You can have all the aspects of a wedding you want in a commitment ceremony but if you make it legally binding on paper the simplest truth is it will absolutely effect your insurance coverage and it will absolutely effect your income thus effecting the insurance THE STATE will cover for you. I'm not trying to break hearts and hurt feelings but this is the truth for my safety and the top notch care that I deserve when being treated for CF and my wife AS I CALL HER is hip to what is going on in the world before entering a binding contract.
May all the Love in the world carry you and your partner safely and
truthfully when it comes to dotting your i's and crossing your t's when living with CF. Love and Light always!