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can include in medical expenses insurance premiums you
pay for policies that cover medical care. Policies can
provide payment for:
- Hospitalization, surgical fees, x-rays, etc.,
- Prescription drugs,
- Replacement of lost or damaged contact lenses,
- Membership in an association that gives cooperative
or so-called "free-choice" medical service
or group hospitalization and clinical care, and
- Qualified long-term care insurance contracts (subject
to additional limitations).
Pre-tax dollars - You cannot deduct
insurance premiums paid with pre-tax dollars because
the premiums are not included in your wages. If you
have a policy that provides more than one kind of payment,
you can include the premiums for the medical care part
of the policy.
Employer-sponsored health insurance plan
- Do not include in your medical any insurance premiums
paid by your employer-sponsored health insurance plan,
unless the premiums are included in your wages.
Medicare B - Medicare B is a supplemental
medical insurance. Premiums you pay for Medicare B are
a deductible medical expense.
Prepaid insurance premiums - Premiums
you pay before you are age 65, for insurance for medical
care for yourself, your spouse, or your dependents after
you reach age 65, are medical care expenses in the year
paid, if they are:
1) Payable in equal yearly installments, or more often,
and
2) Payable for at least 10 years, or until you reach
age 65 (but not for less than 5 years).
You cannot include premiums you pay for:
- Life insurance policies,
- Policies providing payment for loss of earnings,
- Policies for loss of life, limb, sight, etc.
- Policies that pay you a guaranteed amount each week
for a stated number of weeks if you are hospitalized
for sickness or injury, or
- The part of your car insurance premiums that provides
medical insurance coverage for all persons injured
in or by your car because the part of the premium
for you, your spouse, and your dependents is not stated
separately from the part of the premium for medical
care of others.
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