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Double Debt Single Woman

a single woman paying off over $140,000 of debt

hsa

My ER Medical Bill: The Numbers are In

Posted on March 16, 2015 by Double Debt Single Woman

medical expenses

I got the claim details email from by insurance provider not long ago for my recent emergency room visit. I became physically nervous when I saw that email in my inbox. The dollar amount on that form could impact my financial situation for months (or years) if my insurance company wanted to find loopholes to deny benefits. What was the financial damage? Well, in short, better than feared, worse than hoped.

The hospital bill was $11,287.03. My portion, thanks to my (high deductible) insurance, will be $3,020.50. I haven’t been presented with the bill yet so I have some time to plan. With my savings and another paycheck or two, I should be able to pay this off relatively quickly. Unfortunately, this will drain my savings back to nothing.

sick piggy bank

Immediately after that I will need to start saving money to pay for the surgery. I should have another $2,000-$3,000 to pay for that before maxing out my out-of-pocket expenses for the year.

Thanks to blonderbetterfasterstronger for reminding me about my HSA (Health Savings Account). For many of us with high-deductible health plans, we also have an HSA that allows us to save up to $3300 a year, pretax to be saved for health care costs. If used to cover health care, the money does not incur tax at payment either and is thus 100% tax-free. I opened my HSA last year. I should have about $2,000-$3,000 in there by now.

I don’t want to use this HSA money now, however. I’d prefer to build up my HSA savings as we are allowed to house our HSA money in investments to grow it over time. I think of it as a mini retirement investment account for healthcare. It will serve me better to cover more expensive medical procedures down the road.That’s my thinking for now anyway.

So, all in all, not so bad of a financial hit. I should be able to pay for these medical expenses by the end of June and then get back on track to build up savings and attack my student loan debt. It’s a delay, but a necessary one.

.

“Debtor’s prison is real, and opportunity cost is a bitch.” (DDSW)

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https://doubledebtsinglewoman.com/contact-me/

Archives

  • List of All Double Debt Single Woman Posts on One Page (Archives)
  • DDSW in New York Post & MarketWatch.com – “Being Single is Making You Poor”
  • DDSW on Rockstar Finance – “I’m Worthless: from -$142,598 Net Worth to Zero”
  • DDSW on Student Loan Hero – “Are There Financial Benefits to Being Single AF?”
  • DDSW on Less Debt More Wine – “Student Loan Conqueror Series”

About Me

I am Denise, a 40-something single woman living in the U.S. This blog chronicles my slow climb out of deep debt. My “double debt” refers to the $140+K twin terrors of student loan debt ($112,000+) and credit card debt ($30,000+). “Single woman” will address the difficult choices, challenges, and opportunities that those without partners experience when dealing with large debt alone.

After my wake up call (financial trauma) of losing my job in 2013 while carrying over $140,000 in debt, I embarked on the path of extreme saving and minimalism to get my finances in order and ensure some measure of security for my later years.

Here, I write about my successes and failures along with my hopes and fears. I am currently living on 30% of my take home pay, while the other 70% goes toward debt payoff and savings. It’s not easy, but nothing worth doing ever is. Follow my journey…

Debt Payoff Progress

Student Loans — $112,258

$0
100% Paid Off

Credit Card — $30,340

$0
100% Paid Off
Debt Freedom DayNovember 16, 2019
Sweet joyous rapture! I AM DEBT FREEEEEEE!

Savings Progress

Emergency Fund — $30,000 Goal

$22,018 saved
73%

Retirement Savings

$195,674 saved
 RR

2020 Sinking Funds

2020 Life Fund

$50 saved
Rockstar Finance

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