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    Home » 75% of Medicare beneficiaries worry about costs beyond premiums
    Personal finance

    75% of Medicare beneficiaries worry about costs beyond premiums

    AdmincryptBy AdmincryptMarch 24, 2023No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Andrew Bret Wallis | The Image Bank | Getty Images

    Beneficiaries have coverage options

    Basic (or original) Medicare consists of Part A (hospital coverage) and Part B (outpatient care) and covers 65 million people — 57.3 million are age 65 or older and the remaining 7.7 million are younger with permanent disabilities.

    Many beneficiaries choose to get Parts A and B through Advantage Plans (Part C), which also typically includes Part D (prescription drug coverage) and often other extras like dental and vision.

    These plans often have no monthly premium or a low one, and they limit how much you pay out of pocket each year for covered services. Deductibles, copays and coinsurance vary from plan to plan.

    Why the U.S. health-care system is so bad at controlling costs

    Other beneficiaries instead decide to pair Parts A and B with a standalone Part D plan and, often, a Medigap plan, which covers part of the out-of-pocket costs that come with Parts A and B. However, premiums can be pricey, depending on where you live and other factors.

    Basic Medicare has no out-of-pocket limit

    If you have only basic Medicare, there is no cap on what you might spend in any given year.

    “With no secondary coverage, there is no out-of-pocket maximum, which leaves a beneficiary financially exposed,” said Elizabeth Gavino, founder of Lewin & Gavino and an independent broker and general agent for Medicare plans.

    How hospital stays are covered

    Part A, which comes with no premium for most beneficiaries, has a deductible of $1,600 when you are admitted to the hospital. That covers the first 60 days of inpatient care in a benefit period.

    Days 61 through 90 come with coinsurance of $400 per day, and then it’s $800 daily beyond that (so-called lifetime reserve days). And for skilled nursing facilities, a daily coinsurance of $200 kicks in for days 21 through 100.

    If you have Medigap, all of those charges are either fully or partially covered under most plans. 

    Out-of-pocket maximums may range up to $8,300

    Nopphon Pattanasri | Istock | Getty Images

    With Advantage Plans, because the cost-sharing differs from plan to plan, “they will all vary but at least their hospital spending would count toward the plan’s out-of-pocket maximum, meaning it would be capped,” said Danielle Roberts, co-founder of insurance firm Boomer Benefits.

    In 2023, those maximums can be as much as $8,300 for in-network coverage, Roberts said. 

    “In most urban areas, you can find good plans with considerably lower limits,” she said. “If you can find a plan that has a lower out-of-pocket limit, such as $3,000 or $4,000, that is a benefit to you.”

    ‘The sky is the limit’ on Part B coinsurance with basic Medicare

    Part B — which comes with a standard monthly premium of $164.90 in 2023 — has a deductible of $226. But after that, you pay a 20% coinsurance for covered services with no cap on how high that goes.

    “It means the sky is the limit on the 20% coinsurance,” Roberts said. “Imagine trying to cover 20% of eight weeks of chemotherapy or for dialysis for the rest of your life or until you get a transplant.

    “In my opinion, this is the most important thing that you want to get covered,” she added. “Both Medigap and Medicare Advantage Plans do a good job of this, since most Medigap plans cover the 20% [coinsurance] and Advantage Plans have caps on Parts A and B spending.”

    Part D currently has no out-of-pocket maximum

    Under current law, there is no out-of-pocket limit associated with Part D, regardless of whether you get your coverage as a standalone policy or through an Advantage Plan.

    A deductible for Part D, which may come with a premium, can be up to $505 in 2023, also regardless of how you get the coverage. 

    Part D does come with catastrophic coverage that kicks in once out-of-pocket expenses reach $7,400 in a given year, Roberts said.

    After hitting that threshold, “you pay only a small coinsurance or copayment for covered drugs for the rest of the year,” she said.

    In 2025, each beneficiary’s annual out-of-pocket spending for Part D will be capped at $2,000.

    Also be aware that Medigap plans do not cover any Part D costs.



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