Personal Finance

She Never Sold a Single Share. A Year-End Mutual Fund Payout Still Added $1,052 to Her 2026 Medicare Bill.

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The Surprise Inside the 1099-DIV

She is 67, retired, on Medicare, and proud of how carefully she has managed money since her last paycheck. She never sold a share in 2024. Yet when she opened her Medicare paperwork late in 2025, her Part B premium had jumped, and a separate Part D surcharge bill arrived in the mail.

The culprit? A single line on her year-end 1099-DIV: a capital gains distribution from an actively managed mutual fund in her taxable brokerage account. The fund had a strong year, sold winners inside the portfolio, and passed the gains through to every shareholder on the books in December. She reinvested the distribution automatically and barely noticed. The IRS did. So did Medicare.

Her confusion is common. A version of the same scenario pops up often in retirement forums: someone insists they made no trades, changed nothing about their income, did not convert to a Roth, and still got hit with a higher Medicare premium two years later. The phrase that keeps appearing is some version of “I didn’t sell anything, why is this counted as income?”

How a Phantom Payout Becomes a Medicare Bill

The rule that matters here is the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount, or IRMAA. It surcharges Medicare Part B and Part D premiums based on modified adjusted gross income (MAGI), which is essentially adjusted gross income (AGI) plus any tax-exempt interest. The twist that catches retirees off guard is the timing: 2026 premiums are based on the 2024 tax return. A two-year lookback.

For 2026, the standard Part B premium is $202.90 a month. The first IRMAA tier kicks in when MAGI exceeds $109,000 for a single filer or $218,000 for a couple filing jointly. Cross by one dollar and the full tier applies. It is a cliff, not a ramp.

In her case, the mutual fund’s December distribution nudged her 2024 MAGI just over the single-filer line. The cost for 2026 works out to about $1,052 for the year, made up of $974.40 in extra Part B premiums and $174 in Part D surcharges. The Part B portion comes straight out of her Social Security check each month, so the deposit shrinks without any action on her part. The Part D piece is billed separately by Medicare even though her drug plan premium goes to a private insurer.

Capital gains distributions count toward MAGI whether you take the cash or reinvest. Reinvesting buys more shares. It does not erase the taxable event.

Why Active Funds in Taxable Accounts Are the Real Risk

Actively managed funds trade inside the portfolio whether the investor does or not. In strong markets, they often realize large gains and distribute them in November or December. Index funds and broad ETFs typically distribute far less because their turnover is lower. Putting a high-distribution fund inside an IRA or 401(k) shields a retiree from this entirely, because distributions inside tax-advantaged accounts do not hit a 1099-DIV.

A few habits prevent a repeat:

  1. Check estimated year-end distributions in November. Most fund companies publish them weeks before the record date, giving investors time to react.
  2. Keep tax-inefficient funds inside tax-advantaged accounts and favor low-turnover index funds or ETFs in taxable brokerage accounts.
  3. Harvest losses elsewhere in the taxable account to offset distributions that cannot be avoided.
  4. Watch the IRMAA cliff in years close to a threshold. A Roth conversion, a CD maturing, and a fund distribution can stack into one bad December.

The Relief Valve and What to Remember

The good news is that IRMAA is recalculated every year. A one-time distribution spike usually fades by the following year’s premium reset, so a 2024 bump that raises 2026 premiums often disappears by 2027. If a life-changing event such as retirement itself caused the higher income, Form SSA-44 lets a retiree ask Social Security for a redetermination using current, lower income instead of the two-year-old return.

The hardest mistake to undo is the one she made: not knowing the distribution was coming. By the time the 1099-DIV arrives in January, the tax year is closed and the IRMAA math is already set in motion. A five-minute check of a fund’s estimated December distribution, or a quiet move of that fund into an IRA in a low-income year, is usually all it takes. Every household’s numbers land differently, so running the numbers before the calendar turns is worth the effort.

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