BiggerPockets Money Podcast - Financial Independence Through the Unthinkable: A Healthcare Crisis
Episode Date: December 12, 2025Join Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench for a powerful conversation with Regina Moore, who achieved millionaire status before 35 through frugality and her career as a pharmacist. But when her young son was... diagnosed with cancer, everything changed. In this deeply personal episode, Regina opens up about how a healthcare crisis tested her Lean FIRE plan in ways she never anticipated. And how financial independence—despite not being a perfect shield—gave her family options during their hardest moments. Her family was placed in an incredibly difficult position due to subsidy cliffs. The conversation highlights the practical realities Regina and others face, examines the structural challenges within current healthcare policy, and discusses potential solutions. This episode covers: How achieving FI before crisis provided crucial flexibility The ACA subsidy cliff and impossible financial trade-offs Adjusting FIRE plans when life doesn't go as expected Why she's still grateful she achieved financial independence Systemic healthcare issues A must-listen for anyone pursuing financial independence who wants to understand what happens when real life tests your plan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today's guest, Regina Moore, hit millionaire status before 35, but not by following the typical
fire playbook. In fact, as a pharmacist, she was able to earn very high income, keep her expenses
low, pay off her house, and reach a million dollars in net worth before age 35. But those plans
were derailed by a diagnosis of cancer with their two-year-old son. Today's episode is going to
talk about her journey to fire and the preposterous situation that she and her family are
placed in due to subsidy cliffs. This is a major issue for the fire community and has elements of
political discussion around it. We'll try to grapple with those as best we can in a moderate side
that presents both sides of the issue while presenting Regina's story and her positions on this.
Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. My name is Mindy Jensen and with me as always is my
not-Slo-Fi co-host Scott Trench. Thanks, Mind, do you put on a clinic with these introductions.
You'll get that later, guys. We are so excited to be joined by Regina Moore to
today, co-founder of Women's Personal Finance.
She has an amazing FI story, which we're going to be talking about today.
Without further ado, welcome, Regina.
Glad to be here.
I feel like I've been wanting to get together with you all for a long time.
We finally made it happen.
We did finally make it happen.
Shout out to FinCon for finally connecting us.
Let's go back to the beginning of your FI journey.
When did you discover the concept of financial independence and early retirement?
Probably about when I graduated from pharmacy school with a story that I think many people will share.
Someone gave me a copy of Dave Ramsey's book as I was graduating.
And I was interested and I skimmed through it and thought like, oh, well, yeah, of course people pay off debt.
And that it seemed like a good intro, but like not the full story.
and pretty quickly from there I dived into reading personal finance blogs, and I remember one of the main ones that I found first was Mr. Money Mustache. So I spent a lot of my first year out of pharmacy school when I was sometimes sitting late in the evening on slow hospital pharmacist swing shifts, diving deep into all that stuff Pete wrote and kind of branching off from there and deciding that,
I would find a way to be able to retire early someday.
And I had never had a dream job.
I did a job that I knew would have a decent paycheck, but had never really considered that I wouldn't have to do it forever.
So that was my jumping off point.
Can you tell us a little bit about that journey?
Like how did things go?
What did you do to pursue fire?
And how did, can you give us like a couple of key milestones along that journey?
Yeah.
So I graduated as a farmer.
pretty early. I was the youngest in my class. I graduated at 23, and I was pretty low debt to begin with. I had about
$30,000 in loans. I had some help from my father with tuition and scholarships. So I came into
things doing pretty well. And actually, my first year out of school as a pharmacist was my highest earning
year in my career, or I should say like my first full year working. I made about $180,000 that
year, which seemed like such a huge amount of money to someone who, you know, had just been kind of a
broke college student prior and decided really quickly to pay off all the debts that I had. I ended up
having to buy a new used car that year, paid that off, and just really kind of. Just really kind of
of grasp that if I started saving, I would be saving a lot of my income. I would be in a really
good spot. Initially, I was focused more on, because I had some of that kind of Dave Ramsey influence,
on not having any debt and being able to potentially pay off a home that I bought at some point.
So I funneled a lot of that income into home purchase savings. And in 2013,
moved to another state and ended up buying a house with, I think we put about 50% down on the house
and ended up paying that off in under two years. So I own my home outright and let's see,
that would have been, I think, early 2014 that I had the house paid off. And I had been
investing like in my 401k, I had opened up an account with a robo advisor because I didn't really
feel comfortable with investing on my own. I didn't really trust myself that much. But once the
house was paid off, I realized that I needed to kind of step it up. And that's when I started to
read a lot more personal finance content, dive in again with a lot of the blogs.
Shortly thereafter started my own blog. And I'd say that was really when when I started to get
going on the kind of pursuit of fire versus just kind of I'm going to try to not have debt.
And yeah, I've stayed heavily involved since then and have a whole timeline of events.
We'll be back with more right after this short break.
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Let's jump back in.
So why did you pay off your house so quickly?
A really quick Google search says that mortgage rates in 2013 were like three or four percent.
Yeah.
So I don't actually remember what the interest rate was, but it was not high, nothing like it is now.
And if I was to do things over again, knowing what I do now,
I probably would have chosen a different path and probably would not have paid off the house.
But it felt like something that bought me a lot of peace of mind at the time, a sense of comfort in knowing that I wouldn't ever have to worry about making a house payment.
I'd only have to worry about, you know, covering my property taxes and maintaining a home.
And that decision was made a lot earlier on in my personal finance journey. So I did not know all the things that I do know now. And I still, I'm still happy with the decision. You know, you can't know what the future is going to look like. And it's possible that, you know, the markets would have taken a different turn. But we had some big struggles with my family where I was not able to.
to have consistent income for a while due to some major medical issues.
My son was diagnosed with cancer in 2018.
And I think one of the saving graces for my sanity through that process is that I didn't
have to worry about liquidating money for my 401K or something to keep paying the mortgage while
we went through that process. So the math says it's not ideal, but it really did work out for peace
of mind for me and my family and was the jumpstart to the rest of the process for us.
Okay, so a jump start to the rest of the process. How long did it take you to become financially
independent? I still feel like I'm really working on what that number means for me. And if I, if I want
to say I'm financially independent largely depends on my mood that month. I'm pretty comfortable
saying that I'm lean phi. I would say I've been there about two years. So wait, let me do the math.
I'm 30. Yes. So about two years. Actually, two years this month in December. So my initial
number that I had aimed for for considering myself financially independent because the house was
paid off and that wasn't part of the calculation anymore was a million dollar net worth.
And I hit that in 2023 in December.
Money nerd stuff in the 4% rule, I had worked out that our basic needs for the family were
at that point about $40,000 a year.
So nothing extravagant, but, you know, we could eat and we could stay in our house.
And that's kind of been, I'm like a, I'm a worst.
case scenario type of planner.
So that was my initial goal that I wanted to achieve.
Now that we've hit that, I'm a little more flexible in how I think about financial
independence numbers, because once I knew I had those basic needs met, I allowed myself to
start thinking more about what I want, not just what I need.
You live in Oregon.
Which part of Oregon do you live in?
Yeah, I live out on the Oregon.
Oregon coast, so pretty small communities. I'm about three hours from Portland.
And would you say this is a high cost, medium cost, or a low cost living area,
given that you spend 40 grand and have a paid off house?
This is such a hard question to answer anymore because everywhere feels like a high cost of living area.
I would say it probably is in the medium to high cost.
If I had to pay for housing, that would be.
a different discussion for me. There's like a three-bedroom apartment in the town next for me renting
right now for $2,800 a month. So I think that's on the high end of things, but I admit to being
a little bit out of the loop on that and the housing part of that equation is really skewing things
for a lot of people. And because I bought my house in 2013, I'm a little bit protected from
that. And so you earn this, you know, this, this very high income in your first year and this kind of
60 to 70 dollar equivalent, you know, inflation adjusted equivalent over the ensuing years.
What did you invest in in order to build this million dollars in wealth outside of your primary
residence? Sounds like you bought a primary residence, put a lot down, paid it off. Where did the rest go?
Let's see. So when I was working, I was always, from the minute I was eligible for my 401K,
I was using my 401k and investing at least up to the match on there, often quite a bit more.
And then at multiple times in my working career, I also had access to an HSA account.
So my HSA has about $100,000 in it, which is invested in whatever the closest to a total stock market fund was.
So I did, I tried to spread things out.
And so I have my HSA, 401Ks, and IRAs, and was typically investing in those every year.
I usually maxed out my HSA account and have been trying to track my expenses in a way where I can potentially reimburse myself later or have access to that money if I need it, you know, for health care spending.
And with my 401K for the first few years at least, probably the first three to five years, it was probably in a target date fund.
I didn't really start to change things around until I started to dig into the personal finance sphere around 2017 or so.
And at that point, I think I've transitioned some of my investments.
into things like BTSAX and most of my new investments when I had income to put into those
went into things like that as well. And with my older accounts, the things that are in the 401ks,
some of that is just whatever it was in when I rolled them over from the employer funds.
They've been performing pretty well. And I haven't really wanted to do.
dig into sorting out strategies around transitioning those into more simple, simple investments,
as long as it stays within the 401K.
I've just kind of left it alone.
But yeah, mostly for things that I've had my own hand in, it's mostly been like VTSAX or VTI.
I can't even explain why one versus the other that was back one.
I was reading all those great blogs of the people who really like to get granular and dig into
things.
And it made more sense at the time.
And right now I just know they perform pretty well and keep growing.
And that's a solid strategy for me.
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Let's jump back in.
I have several questions regarding health care and your
HSA, you really glossed over this cancer diagnosis in 2018 when you were telling your story.
And I want to come back to that because this healthcare is a big hot topic right now.
And specifically, that's like in the middle of your FI journey, your son got diagnosed
with cancer.
How old was he when he was diagnosed?
He was two, almost three years old.
A child's cancer diagnosis is traumatic, but he's a baby getting this diagnosis.
how did that affect your FI journey?
Well, I thought the FI journey was over when we first got the news.
And, you know, you hear so much about financial toxicity with major medical issues and families,
and especially with cancer diagnoses that I just assumed, you know, if he survives,
I'm sure this is going to drain us and we'll be starting over from square one.
I believe at the time he was diagnosed, I had a net worth, not including the house.
And just to be clear, like when I talk about my net worth, I generally don't include the value of the house in that.
It's easier for my brain to think about numbers of money that I can work with.
So when he was diagnosed, my net worth outside of the house was about $400,000.
And that was at the end of 2018.
Actually, we were admitted to the hospital with suspicion that it was cancer on Christmas Eve, 2018.
So December's an interesting month for me emotionally.
But I remember, because that was also like right at the height of when I was starting to blog and really get invested in this community.
I think it was in January of 2019 that there was a very small dip, a little micro crash,
and I definitely thought it was all over for us financially.
What ended up happening was I already had a very strong frugal streak.
My blog back then was that frugal pharmacist.
and it's a skill or habit that me and my husband both share.
And we just really shut down spending as much as possible while my son was sick.
We mostly lived at Ronald McDonald House.
We didn't spend much of anything if we could avoid it.
I ended up being able to work a little bit as a pharmacist.
I think maybe three or four days a month, I would find a shift about two hours away.
Maybe not two hours.
Maybe an hour away.
So I'd drive and I'd work a pharmacist shift and then I'd come back to the hospital and
share the bed with my son.
And by whatever luck and in navigating on our part, we didn't end up anywhere.
worse off by the end of his cancer treatment. If anything, the markets had started to pick up
and we were doing better off by the time he was done, even though I had worked significantly
less. And that was pretty eye-opening for me and definitely inspired me to shift gears a little
bit with an intention to not go back to work full time. Did you have an HSA during your son's
cancer treatments? Or did you have traditional health insurance? I had, I had an HSA, a high deductible
plan. And if I remember right, the out-of-pocket maximum was about $12,000, which is not nothing.
But if you've budgeted and saved for that, it was something that was manageable,
especially because we had been saving money in the HSA account already.
So when he was initially diagnosed, that was in December,
we hit our maximum out of pocket for that year based on the process leading up to him being diagnosed.
And then we also hit the maximum out of pocket in like January of the first full year he was six,
2019, just due to the expense of cancer treatment.
Part way through 2019, I think it was probably in like July or August, based on that I wasn't
working much, he was able to qualify for Medicaid under the,
CHIP program, the, I forget the acronym, but it allows children to access Medicaid,
although the parents don't themselves qualify. So at a higher AGI, the kids can get it. And he's been on
CHIP since then. What is the requirement? How does one become eligible for CHIP? CHIP eligibility is,
is it's based on your adjusted gross income.
And I believe for a family of three,
it was around $70,000 a year, AGI.
So we have stayed underneath that every year since 2019,
and he's been able to effectively have free health care.
There's some extra hurdles to navigate with that
because specific providers aren't accessible and things like that or take more effort to get to.
But for all of his main needs, it's been fine for us.
That covers 100% of health care costs for him?
Pretty much. I mean, there are certain things that would be qualified as not, you know,
if it's not considered medically necessary.
Like if he went to the dermatologist and had a wart that wasn't bothering him,
or something. Like, they might say that it's not medically necessary to remove that,
and he might not be able to get that done. There's that type of thing can come up from time to time.
But as a kid, who doesn't really have any cosmetic concerns, we haven't run into anything like that.
I was going to ask, how long was he in treatment?
He is. So my son was in cancer treatment from the end of December 2018 until mid-January of 2020.
So we went home right as COVID started.
And he is now in remission?
Yes and no.
Different types of cancers have different ways that they qualify it.
He does not have something they call remission.
They just say no evidence of disease.
But he's officially five years off of treatment as of this summer.
So more or less considered cured and it's assumed that this cancer wouldn't come
back. Cancer treatment does make you more susceptible to other forms of cancer like leukemia.
So that's something we'll have to monitor for and then, you know, long-term health effects from
that treatment, which is very intense. But yeah, I think we're, I think we're in the clear
with his specific cancer diagnosis. It's just awful that you guys had to go through this. I'm glad
that we're in a great spot now, it sounds like, and doing much better. Can you, can you, can you
you just let us know from the story around finances, it sounds like this treatment did several
things, this diagnosis and the treatment did several things. One is it had you stopped working
or stopped working a considerable amount, reducing those hours, a considerable amount for a very
extended period, at least the next year, presumably up until 2020 and then thereafter as well.
Is that correct?
Yeah, I worked between like one and four days a month through his treatment, and I think even the first three or four months I didn't work at all. And then I went back part time when we were able to come home because I needed time off for ongoing appointments. He still had a lot of visits that we had to go to three hours away and overnight stays. So I tried to work part time.
a while. So I would have went back to work in January or February of 2020. I ended up taking
a leave of absence by May of 2020 with everything going on with COVID and being a pharmacist
in a retail pharmacy kind of front lines there. I was very, very stressed out. Like it was not
working out well for my health. I was having my...
migraines, sometimes daily, super stressed, and also none of the restrictions with things like, you know,
mask mandates or anything like that had come into effect yet. And I had already been masking before
the pandemic because he had had a bone marrow transplant. So some of the things that I had already
been doing to kind of protect the health of my son became extremely politicized. And luckily,
I was able to get unemployment, which was not a lot of money, but it was a little bit. And I took three months off,
kind of at the height of COVID as a caregiver. So I got approved for it because of being a caregiver of someone
who was high risk. And I tried to go back to work after that. And this is when everything,
was very much a mess with the health care industry, a lot of understaffing. Pharmacies were closing.
We had lines of, you know, patients out the front door of the building, and they were scheduling
everybody at least at 40 hours a week, and most people were getting significant overtime, just
trying to cover all of the needs at the time. And because of that, I ended up leaving altogether.
They had told me that I didn't have a choice in choosing to work less while they needed me to
work more. And I said that didn't work. And I am now a per diem employee. So I work just a little
bit. They'll ask me if I can help out from time to time, and if I'm available, I can go and choose
to take a shift, but I don't have any obligation to come in. In 2018, we get the diagnosis in
December. In 2019, we step back and have a greatly diminished hours. This extends through
2020 when we get good news that things are in a much better place for your son. But we also
have health risks from COVID that are particularly acute for your family, and that continues to
disrupt your ability to generate income in various ways due to your very reasonable lack of comfort
with returning to work in that environment.
And so this is a multi-year, five, six, seven-year disruption to your income flows, this health
care event, and it's in a termification is downstream on the income side.
What were the costs?
How do you think about the costs?
And one of the things I think that's particularly top of mind for people right now is,
is fire and health care.
It's a particularly acute challenge for people to grapple with here in 2025,
especially in the context of ACA subsidies going away or uncertainty around ACA subsidies.
How does one think about that?
If you're giving advice to somebody else who's thinking about fire, has young children,
and this could happen to them in there.
You know, God forbid.
but how does one think about that in the context of this risk, this healthcare risk that is so
clearly delaying and damaging to your fire journey? How did they think about it in the context of
today? Unfortunately, I think healthcare is the number one factor that's the wild card for anybody
planning to potentially retire early. Factoring in how we are going to manage that is definitely my
biggest ongoing struggle. I think one thing to keep in mind if you're wanting to potentially retire early
is being really cognizant of what you feel like you need to live a good quality life and how
expensive that really needs to be. So I come at a lot of this from that frugality angle,
thinking about what my minimal needs are and then just building on that as I reach certain goals.
And for a lot of people, if you have a hope of retiring early, if health care spending for
individuals and family doesn't change very soon with some sort of major health care reform,
it's making it feel less and less achievable and accessible.
That being said, if you decide to be content and live a lifestyle that can be had at a lower income, you do potentially open up some of those subsidized channels for yourself.
So like I said, with my son, he's been on the state Medicaid program with CHIP since 2019.
that's definitely made things a little bit easier.
And we have been on a marketplace plan with the ACA subsidies for,
what would that have been, 2022 probably.
I don't remember the exact year, but that's when I finally got kicked off of my employer health plan.
And then actually just this last year, mid-20204, we, in my state,
of Oregon, they expanded the state Medicaid program, so they increased eligibility levels. And
when we applied for our ACA plan, where you go in and plug everything in, planning for it for
2025, we actually got kicked over to the state Medicaid program too. So for 2025,
we haven't paid anything for health care. However, it puts me in a really
unique situation now as someone who is still earning some income, which obviously is nice to have
and that I have to be really, really thoughtful about if increasing my income is actually paying
off for my family because we'll hit that subsidy cliff and, you know, potentially be out
15 to 20,000 minimal between deductibles.
and premiums for insurance for me and my husband at the very least.
So this is like this is a central issue, right?
Like if your fire number is, you know, $1.5 million, $60,000 a year and annual spend, for example.
And this number is either zero or it is $20,000 a year.
That's the difference, right?
This cliff effect is is so real and so acute.
is that literally the difference here if you go over the $70,000 limit in household income?
And that incentive, you literally drop your coverage and have to spend this amount more starting next year in 2026 if subsidies expire.
Or how does that work in your situation here?
Because it seems so preposterous the situation that you are in right now based on the rules of health care in this country.
Yeah, it's a completely ridiculous situation. So for the family of three in Oregon to qualify for this extended Medicaid program, the AGI is right about $50,000 a year. And then for children or a child to qualify in my family of three, it was about $70,000. I don't know exactly because it's been a few years since I looked at that number. So my household AGI is.
is under 50,000. And some of that is achieved by moving money from my brokerage accounts
into traditional IRA savings, you know, so that our AGI stays at a certain level.
But, but yeah, I mean, between the premiums and then, you know, my husband has chronic health
needs, and I figure with medications that he needs, that would probably be $5002,000 a month.
Between the medications and doctors' visits and co-pays and all the deductibles and everything,
yeah, I estimate that it would probably be about $20,000 a year.
So I'm forced to make decisions around working less because it wouldn't just be,
$20,000 that I would need to earn to offset that.
You know, it's additional because there's taxes and whatnot.
And to consider if earning that additional income provides any benefit to my family because
I'm also not home as much, I'm not available for child care, et cetera, et cetera.
And it's unfortunate because like with the career that I have, being a farmer,
there's another developing pharmacist shortage. And I have capacity and interest in potentially
working a little bit more. I don't ever want to go back full time or even at a steady part-time
rate. But, you know, if there's a couple weeks here and there where there's something going on
and I can go in and work, I'm not opposed to helping my colleagues out so that things aren't
as chaotic at the pharmacy, but I really can't make that decision and maintain things where they
need to be for my household.
This is so freaking stupid.
This is so dumb.
Like what you just said here about the system, what you're doing is perfectly smart.
But the situation that you're in is preposterous.
This is ridiculous.
Let's lay out what is happening here.
You went on a fire journey. Your goal was literally to become a multi-millionaire, financially
independent, retiree in your 30s or 40s. You did pretty good on that journey. You paid off a house. You
built a lean fire, a barista fire portfolio. Then tragedy struck. And your kid got a horrible illness
that took years to treat, was very expensive. And it forced you to basically live on a poverty
level income or realize poverty level level income across your portfolio so that you could
qualify for Medicaid chip in your state across that plan. You also, it sounds like your
husband, I think, has some chronic health issues that require treatment to a lesser degree
on an ongoing basis as well. Is that right? Yep. That's accurate. You are a highly qualified
capable worker who could command a very high wage, but you can't do that because the choice is either
work full-time and go throughout the year pay full taxes. But you're paying taxes in a much higher
tax bracket and pay for an insurance and overall health care costs that would cost you $20,000
more overall, which is just not worth you. It might even come out, you know, might come out worse off
by working 40 to 50 hours a week across a year at your highly paid profession,
then by just staying at home and not doing that.
That's the effect of this cliff situation in the healthcare system.
And it's not like you want this.
This is not like something you like.
This is what you're stuck in because of the preposterous absurdities of health care in
in your situation.
And that requires, that requires really complete coverage for really,
devastating health health situations that are not your fault, that are not, that are that are, that are,
that are completely just bad luck. Is this, is this the correct way to frame the situation? Am I doing
right? My rant here, Regina? Yeah, more or less. I mean, I don't know exactly what the full
repercussions would be. I haven't quantified that. But, you know, the thing you didn't add into that is also
that then I lose my time and my time with my family and probably come out somewhat,
on, you know, in a worse situation financially right now. That might mean that I have significantly
more money in my retirement years, but I'm not really concerned about that at this point. I've dialed in
my preloading on my investments in a way that I'm not concerned with my retirement income or retirement
savings, everything that I'm doing right now is just navigating living over the next five to 10 years.
And yeah, I don't feel like I have the flexibility I would like to be able to go out and earn more
money.
And it's not just about the money, right?
Like, I'm okay with where I'm at, but if I'm going to do work, I want to be compensated for
it, obviously.
and I don't have the flexibility to make decisions about working a little bit more without having major financial ramifications.
You're in a crazy situation here because, like we said, this cliff has to be front and center, and there's no real world where you'd work the full time, because that wasn't ever your plan.
You pursued fire so that you would have flexibility, but you would work more, possibly above.
of this cliff if it didn't have such immediate and devastating consequences for your ability to
qualify for for healthcare from from the state essentially. I can hear, Regina, some people,
let's acknowledge that you had a son with cancer at two years old, terrible tragedy,
nothing you can do, not your fault. Okay. But I can, I can hear some people, you know,
they're shouting at their podcast feed on their their car player or their phone or or watching
here in YouTube, and they're saying, hey, this, this, this is not how the system was supposed to be
designed. You know, why is that, why is this multimillionaire paid off homeowner receiving
Medicaid chip for their family? And how does that work? And how do you think about that? How,
how would you answer that challenge from somebody, you know, who, who maybe doesn't like that that
situation is unfolding to a certain extent? I mean, for one, I would say none of this system is how it was
supposed to be functioning. I think if you ask most average people, I don't think any of us
expected that, you know, 20 to 30 percent of our planned spending should be going towards
maintaining health care. So the system's not working for anybody, really. You know, I paid fairly
significant taxes for a good portion of my career when I my short career when I was working full
time. I didn't have a child then. It was just two to adults earning. So I've paid into these
systems and I am using them fully as their design based on the income limits and and all of those
things. And I'm a proponent for things like universal health care. I am not opposed to paying more
taxes on what I do earn so that more people, myself included, have access to more affordable
health care. I wouldn't mind having a system where my annual taxes were higher, and I didn't have to do so much
long-term planning about budgeting and planning to afford health care. I would prefer to just have
that taken as some percentage of my income and know that the bulk of our medically necessary
health care is going to be covered perhaps with some low co-pays or things like that. And based on the
way I've had to set up my situation, I continue to put money into my tax-deferred accounts.
which I will likely realize some pretty high taxes on by the time I do retire and start to
tap into those because I won't have a child that I is factored in to my annual taxes owed.
My husband's a bit older than me, so it's possible that I'll be a multimillionaire with
RMDs that are pretty significant when I'm in my 70s and I'll be taxed at a pretty high,
high rate then. And if that high rate means that people are having access to health care and I still
have a pretty good income that makes me comfortable enough to live off of, I'm okay with that.
Like, taxes aren't necessarily the worst thing. I just want to make sure they're going towards
actually helping people who pay them to live better lives.
Yeah, I think it's a really tough subject here.
And this, we tried to debate this.
We tried to not debate this.
We tried to frame it with a representative from KFF, I think last week.
When did that come out?
That came out on Tuesday, November 25th.
And it's a really hard and interesting and this, you know, debate and discussion for America
at large and particularly acute in the.
fire community because the health care strategy in the fire community is so heavily dependent
on realized income, right? Whether that qualifies you for Medicaid CHIP or whether that
qualifies you for subsidies for ACA plans and how much, how many, how much in the form of those
subsidies that you're getting. And I think that's a really challenging political issue for
this country right now. And your situation is, it brings it to just such stark reality
because of the tragedy that struck your family and how you were forced to navigate it
based on the way the current system is set up. And so thank you for sharing it and,
and taking on some, some hard questions about that, about that situation here today.
Yeah. I hope most more people are willing to be outspoken in some of these things and
dig into those conversations a little bit more deeply. Definitely, definitely is an area that
maybe a lot of people haven't put much thought into and should think about a little bit more.
Hopefully this conversation will spark debate and thought about it inside of the fire community
as well because I think it's just such a challenging issue. And I just admire and appreciate
you sharing your story and how you've handled things. And I'm glad that the system was there for you
in this really challenging time personally.
Regina, thank you so much for your time today.
And thank you for sharing the story about your journey with this navigating the horrible
healthcare landscape that we find ourselves in right now.
Where would one find women's personal finance?
Because you used to be a Facebook group and that has since closed.
So women's personal finance, we have a website.
We don't do a whole lot with it.
But women's personal finance.org or women's personal finance.
org or women's personal finance.org slash socials has links to pretty much everything. We are most
active on threads, which is like meta's version of Twitter, but we're also on Instagram and
on Facebook and TikTok. We're on all those things. We did have a very large Facebook group.
We closed it in December of 2024. So just now coming up on a one.
year anniversary of closing that 82,000 member Facebook group so that we had more time to dedicate
to our private communities and just we're feeling a little bit of burnout with the Facebook thing.
So it's a little bit more fun being able to just manage social media instead of such a large
Facebook group.
But yeah, if you're interested in any of this, come check that out.
We also have a weekly newsletter that goes out, and you can find a link to that on that
Women's Personalfinance.org slash socials link as well.
All right, Scott, that was Regina Moore, and that was quite the wild ride that she had.
I just want to take a moment and say that I don't think that health care should be a political
issue.
Literally, everybody needs health care.
For exactly Regina's story, you can be fine.
They were in Hawaii before he got his diagnosis.
All of a sudden, Christmas Eve, you have a childhood cancer diagnosis and a 14-month
treatment plan ahead of you.
And your life completely changes in the blink of an eye.
That's not political.
That's a basic human right to be able to take care of your children.
So for this, like, she is faced with a bunch of really bad options.
And she has chosen the option that is like the least bad for her.
Yeah, I think it's a really tough situation.
and I think that folks with different political views will view this situation differently, right?
Some folks who lean left will view the situation as health care's a right and this is,
this should not be a burden unfairly placed on this family that just had bad luck and tragedy strike
for a two-year-old getting cancer.
And I think other folks on the other political side will say, this is a person who's capable
of working and commanding a high income and they should pay taxes into that system or pay for
their own health care if they're capable of doing it since she has a million dollar net worth.
And I think that that's the crux of the political debate around health care in America today.
And I don't know what the right answer is. I just think that this story highlights that
problem really acutely here and the challenge that those conflicting viewpoints will have in agreeing
on a way forward in a situation like this. I also think that it's really instructive in the
fire community in particular because the fire community right now has a lot of particularly good
options that may not be available to the rest of the public, right?
Option one, go back to work and get a health insurance plan if tragedy strikes.
Option two, control your income and qualify for Medicaid or chip or get heavy subsidies
from an ACA plan.
And option three, being to do some sort of alternative to health insurance, either pay
the premiums or get some alternative to health insurance like health shares.
And I think that those options are excellent for the fire community, potentially going to be controversial as the debate around health care continues in this country.
And I think that the challenge for the fire community will be thinking, you know, planning around that.
What are health care costs going to look like once you hit early retirement and have the option to control your income?
What can you actually count on in the future, in the decades into the future as you approach traditional retirement age?
that's going to be the challenge. I don't think we have a good answer for that right now. And I think the only real answer is be conservative with it and be ready for those costs to go up, whether that forces you to go back to work or whether that forces you to build a more conservative portfolio to potentially cover those health care costs in early retirement. Or medical tourism. Alternative options for insurance include the health shares, self-insuring, doing the concierge doctors. There's a lot of different options. But
When you have a catastrophe like this, you need a catastrophic plan that helps cover the costs.
And yeah, I am looking forward to a really great alternative program to health insurance,
but I'm not hopeful that I'm going to see it anytime soon.
Yeah.
Health insurance will always suffer from this problem, right?
Because, again, capitalism is the allocation of scarce resources, right?
That's all it is in there.
And it works in a lot of different categories.
The debate about whether it works in health care is, again, a very political issue because
healthcare can often mean, you know, the allocation of resources that mean life or death
for people.
And so it's a really challenging concept here.
And again, I think the two schools of thought are, we're all in this together and everybody's insured.
And then who pays for it?
And how do we encourage more responsible behavior, more cost conscious behavior inside the health
system in the single payer system. And the other alternative is allowing the free market to work.
And the free market working will pool together people with lower risk profiles, like for example,
potentially my family, and pool together people with higher risk profiles like Regina's family
and shift those costs potentially unfairly into people that have preexisting conditions and away
from people who don't. And that's the challenge with healthcare, right? And I don't, again,
I don't know what the solution is. All I know is that for me in the fire journey, that
means be conservative, right? Make sure that there are these other options available and that you're
planning on the worst case scenario or ready to handle the worst case scenario if it comes up with
plan B or plan C. All right. Scott, should we give out our email addresses in case anybody wants
to send us emails? Oof, not on this one. You want our email addresses. Go listen to other
episodes of the podcast where we put them out there pretty frequently. But this one's so political
that I feel we're going to get some interesting ones from folks who actually want to
to go hunting them down. I would encourage respectful emails, but I know that that's not what's
going to happen. So, yeah, I'll be in my inbox. Let us know in the comments, you know, assuming that you're
not a hardcore cheerleader for the left or the right. How do we do today on this? Do we present it
with a reasonable neutrality of really hard issue? Or do you have any coaching points for us that are
helpful and not provocative or trashing things? Because we won't tolerate extreme political views.
That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Puckets Money podcast. He is Scott.
I am Indy sensitive.
Did I just mess up my name?
See, I don't just get my husband's name wrong.
I sometimes get my own name wrong.
That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
He is Scott Trench.
I am Indy Jensen saying don't pout sourcrow.
