4. I cannot really change my hospitalization plan since I was admitted once in year 2010. If I were to change my plan, then the pre existing condition won’t be covered anymore.
No, that's not correct. Policy downgrades are allowed without a pre-existing condition reset as long as you stay with the same carrier. Confirm that with your carrier, of course.
For example, let's suppose you both have a private hospital Integrated Shield plan with "zero dollar" rider. Any of these adjustments are possible without pre-existing condition resets, for either/both you and your spouse:
* Private hospital Integrated Shield, "Lite"/"Saver"/"Assist" rider
* Public hospital A ward Integrated Shield, corresponding full/"Lite"/"Saver"/"Assist" rider (if offered)
* Public hospital B1 ward Integrated Shield ("as charged" if offered or "Standard Plan" if not), corresponding rider (full/"Lite"/"Saver"/"Assist" if offered)
* Public hospital B2+ ward Integrated Shield with corresponding "Plus" or "Assist" rider (only available if your current carrier is NTUC Income)
* Any of the above options without any rider
If you think you and/or your spouse will inevitably make this sort of adjustment
anyway due to escalating premiums (medical inflation and age), then you might as well make that adjustment now.
If you have a relative abundance of Medisave funds, a rider adjustment is practically a no brainer. If you and/or your spouse are content with a lower hospital ward class than you're presently insured for, then a base policy adjustment has merit, especially if you're going to try to carry a rider along with it (because cash rider premium levels correlate with the type of base plan you have).
Some "hard" decisions will need to be made, clearly, and this set of decisions might not be so hard.
limster said:
he's trying to tell you that his after-tax take home pay is at least 12,200 SGD a month.
Inclusive of (taxable) rental income, it would appear.
I don't think yyhwin is trying to boast or brag, because practically any "idiot" can assume tons of debt to finance assets which then generate a 4 or 5 digit but still inadequate cashflow. (Not saying you're an idiot, yyhwin. Plenty of smart people get too deep into debt.)