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1. Medicare Enrollment is More Than Picking a Plan
Many clients believe Medicare enrollment is simply choosing a plan from carriers like UnitedHealthcare, Humana, or Aetna. In reality, enrollment involves six steps:
- Timing – Deciding when to enroll (age 65 vs. delaying due to employer coverage, HSAs, etc.).
- Path – Choosing between Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage.
- Plans – Selecting specific carriers and products.
- Enrollment – Completing Part A/B enrollment via Social Security.
- Adding Coverage – Adding Part D or Medigap.
- Annual Review – Reviewing coverage every year.
📖 Reference: Medicare.gov – Getting Started
2. Original Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage
Original Medicare (A + B + Medigap + Part D):
- National access (Mayo, Cleveland Clinic, etc.).
- Few prior authorizations.
- Predictable costs with Medigap.
- Medigap = “cost insurance,” not health insurance, covering out-of-pocket gaps.
Medicare Advantage (Part C):
- Private insurance companies manage care.
- Attractive features: $0 premiums, bundled drug coverage, extras (dental, vision, gym).
- Risks: narrow networks, high prior authorization rates (50M vs. <400K in Original Medicare, 2023), and higher cost exposure ($4,700–$9,000+ out-of-pocket caps).
📖 Reference: KFF – Medicare Advantage Facts
3. Medigap Policy Considerations
- Plans are standardized (e.g., Plan G, N, F). Benefits are identical across carriers; only cost structure differs.
- Plan G is generally best (“greatest”), with N as a secondary option. Plan F is closed to new enrollees and shrinking in value.
- Premium increases depend on:
- Risk pool size/health.
- Medical loss ratios (MLR): ideal range 60–80%.
- Pricing model: attained age (rises annually with age), issue age (locked at enrollment age), or community rated (flat, but may use disguised increases).
📖 Reference: Medicare.gov – Medigap Policy Choices
4. Part D Drug Plans – What Really Matters
- Coverage is private, not federal. Formularies vary; not all drugs covered.
- “Preferred” pharmacies may cost more than standard—always compare.
- Average premium in 2025 ≈ $46. Plans cluster into low ($0–15) or high ($80+).
- Out-of-pocket cap = $2,000 in 2025 (per Inflation Reduction Act), but only applies if all prescriptions are covered by the plan.
- Compare based on the three-legged stool: coverage, cost, and quality (star ratings, prior auths, pharmacy access).
📖 Reference: Medicare.gov – Drug Coverage (Part D)
5. Using Tools: Medicare.gov vs. Hey Mo
- Medicare.gov Plan Finder is essential but cumbersome: requires repeated manual entry, doesn’t store drugs without a Medicare account, and hides prior authorization info.
- Hey Mo ($30/year) automates re-checking during open enrollment, tests brand/generic swaps, compares across 20 pharmacies, and flags prior authorizations and GoodRx coupons.
📖 Reference: Medicare.gov – Plan Finder
6. IRMAA (Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount)
- Applies when MAGI exceeds $106,000 (single) or $212,000 (joint) in 2025.
- Advisors should plan for IRMAA tiers in retirement income planning.
- SSA-44 form allows clients to appeal IRMAA after life-changing events (e.g., retirement, work reduction).
📖 Reference: SSA – Medicare IRMAA Appeals
7. Advisor Red Flags & Guidance
- Clients delaying Medicare without creditable coverage risk permanent penalties.
- Medicare Advantage often marketed heavily by agents due to 40% higher commissions vs. Medigap; advisors should encourage clients to ask probing questions.
- Encourage annual Part D reviews—only ~30% of beneficiaries do, yet savings can be thousands (recorded case: $149,000 saved by switching).
- Retiree health coverage varies widely—must be compared individually against Medigap or Advantage.
📖 Reference: NCOA – Medicare Mistakes
✅ Bottom Line for Financial Advisors:
- Focus client discussions on timing, path, and annual reviews, not just plan selection.
- Integrate Medicare costs and IRMAA into broader retirement income and tax planning.
- Be aware of agent incentives that may bias recommendations toward Advantage.
- Use tools (Medicare.gov, Hey Mo, or CSG data) to validate plan costs, networks, and quality—not just premiums.
Didn't realize that there was underwriting involved when changing from one carrier to another if you'd already selected a Medigap plan/carrier. SO it is vital to also make sure your carrier is a good one with those loss ratios and premium increases.
- Jennifer H.
1) The lack of trust of Medicare's star rating system 2) How to choose a Medigap Policy based on current and future low premium costs 3)Researching health plans through Medicare.gov
- Darin D.
It may be difficult to go from a Medicare Advantage plan to a medigap one if you have health issues. You can compare plans at medicare.gov.
- Stephen F.
LOVE this presenter! Extremely knowledgeable, provided actionable plans, engaging to listen to. Will look into the Hey MOE program as an advisor.
- Erin E.
The departure of insurers from providing Part D coverage.
- Mark Z.
Attendees Comments:
Didn't realize that there was underwriting involved when changing from one carrier to another if you'd already selected a Medigap plan/carrier. SO it is vital to also make sure your carrier is a good one with those loss ratios and premium increases.
- Jennifer H.
1) The lack of trust of Medicare's star rating system 2) How to choose a Medigap Policy based on current and future low premium costs 3)Researching health plans through Medicare.gov
- Darin D.
It may be difficult to go from a Medicare Advantage plan to a medigap one if you have health issues. You can compare plans at medicare.gov.
- Stephen F.
LOVE this presenter! Extremely knowledgeable, provided actionable plans, engaging to listen to. Will look into the Hey MOE program as an advisor.
- Erin E.
The departure of insurers from providing Part D coverage.
- Mark Z.