Mar-08-2021 11:20 AM
Mar-29-2021 10:48 AM
Mar-23-2021 04:53 PM
camper19709 wrote:
I use St Brendan's Isle Mail Service in Florida. Great company. They may be able to help you find health coverage. I have medicare.
Mar-23-2021 04:52 PM
JimK-NY wrote:
Sorry I cannot help with medical, but I have a couple of recommendations for handling other issues.
1. Be very careful in picking your RV insurance company and policy. Most are not designed for a full timer and contents are minimally covered. There is a good reason for this since it avoids double coverage for most people because their homeowners or renters policy will cover contents.
2. You want to establish a mailing service in advance. Since you are currently in Idaho, I recommend South Dakota for residency and mailing service. You need to transfer at least your bank address a month or so in advance so you can bring in a statement with the SD address when you register with DMV. SD is very friendly for traveling residents: no income taxes, several good choices for mailing service, no annual vehicle inspections, low costs for vehicle insurance.
3. There are a lot of choices on how to get mail and packages from your mailing service. We traveled a lot so when we were in an area and ready for a mail drop, we emailed the service at least 2 days in advance. They forwarded with USPS priority mail.
4. You want to be as paperless as possible well in advance of traveling or changing your State for residency. It is pretty easy to set up paperless so your actual snail mail is close to unnecessary.
5. Never rely on the Post Office to forward mail. Weeks after our mail was supposed to be forwarded they were still leaving our mail in the old mailbox.
6. Again set up forwarding, paperless and everything else you will need at least a couple of months in advance. I remember finding somewhere around 50-60 places that we needed to notify for our change of address.
7. Be careful about the appearance of your new address. It will likely include a PMB (personal mailbox) number. Do not use PMB on your address. Just include the number as if it is an apartment number. Many financial institutions want an actual address and will not accept a PO Box. Don't lie but just avoid the issue.
8. I recommend you file IRS form 8822 for change of address. It is not absolutely necessary but is another means of documenting your change of address even though you will not be living in South Dakota.
Mar-23-2021 08:31 AM
Mar-23-2021 03:29 AM
Mar-22-2021 07:46 PM
PlayaJilly wrote:
We don't want obamacare.
Mar-08-2021 07:05 PM
arhayes wrote:
You are actually asking very smart questions! For mail, there are several mail services that Full-timers use but the two I'm familiar with are:
- Escapees-Mail Service
- America's Mailbox - Americas Mailbox
arhayes wrote:
Medical is trickier depending on your state and whether you can qualify for an Obamacare plan. You say you didn't want one, but insurance was cost prohitive when we retired as I wasn;t willing to pay $2500 a month for the two of us. We retired at 60 and hit the road, so had to go thru 5 years of scrambling for insurance because our retirement income was too high to get an ACA subsidy. if your retirement income will be below the threshhold (it was $63k - not sure if that's that same now) you may be in good shape.
arhayes wrote:
Just make sure whatever plan you get would you would be in network in any state.
arhayes wrote:
We wound up using a Healthcare Sharing Ministry program that worked for us. It provided essentially the same poor coverage as ACA at less than half the cost. As an aside, I found that routine doctor visits cost me less by paying cash than using the insurance. We used GoodRX for routine prescriptions at reasonable prices.
arhayes wrote:
You need to look at legal Domicile issues if you think you may change state of residency for legal purposes. Again, Escapees has info on their website to give you some guidance.
Mar-08-2021 06:00 PM
arhayes wrote:
You are actually asking very smart questions! For mail, there are several mail services that Full-timers use but the two I'm familiar with are:
- Escapees-***Link Removed***
- America's Mailbox - ***Link Removed***
Medical is trickier depending on your state and whether you can qualify for an Obamacare plan. You say you didn't want one, but insurance was cost prohitive when we retired as I wasn;t willing to pay $2500 a month for the two of us. We retired at 60 and hit the road, so had to go thru 5 years of scrambling for insurance because our retirement income was too high to get an ACA subsidy. if your retirement income will be below the threshhold (it was $63k - not sure if that's that same now) you may be in good shape. Just make sure whatever plan you get would you would be in network in any state. We wound up using a Healthcare Sharing Ministry program that worked for us. It provided essentially the same poor coverage as ACA at less than half the cost. As an aside, I found that routine doctor visits cost me less by paying cash than using the insurance. We used GoodRX for routine prescriptions at reasonable prices.
You need to look at legal Domicile issues if you think you may change state of residency for legal purposes. Again, Escapees has info on their website to give you some guidance.
Hope this gets you some info you can use.
Mar-08-2021 05:49 PM
lbrjet wrote:
Since you have been researching what else can you get besides Obamacare?
Mar-08-2021 02:55 PM
Mar-08-2021 12:08 PM
Mar-08-2021 11:55 AM