A 65-year-old U.S. couple retiring in 2012 will spend at least $240,000 for healthcare costs in retirement, officials of Fidelity Investments say. The latest estimate from Fidelity Investments on healthcare out-of-pocket costs for a U.S. retired couple at age 65 in 2012 does not include long-term-care costs, over-the-counter medications or most dental costs, Marketwatch reported. The $240,000 estimate is based on average life expectancy for a 65-year-old man in 2012, age 82, and a 65-year-old woman, age 85 -- but half of U.S. retirees will live longer than that, company officials said. Fidelity\'s 65-year-old couple, retiring this year with $75,000 in household income, should expect to pay about $10,500 for healthcare costs not included in Medicare. Henry Hebeler, 78, a former Boeing executive who created AnalyzeNow.com, a retirement-planning Web site, shares his medical expenses to help others prepare for retirement. Hebeler and his wife are in good health but spent about $40,000 in annual medical expenses for two years, even with Medicare. Some Medicare premiums are deducted directly from Social Security checks, but Medicare Part B -- which covers doctors and some other services not covered by Part A, which covers hospital services -- currently costs a couple about $2,400 per year. Most retirees buy Part D coverage for prescription drugs. A Medigap policy, which covers expenses not covered by Medicare, could cost a couple about $4,000 a year. \"Medicare covers 80 percent of your doctor\'s bill and a good deal of your hospital bills,\" Hebeler said in a statement.