By Joe Baker, Next
Avenue Contributor Sep 4, 2018
If you’re 65 or older, working and have an
employer group health plan based on your current work, you may have questions
about how your job-based insurance coordinates with Medicare. On our Medicare
Rights Center National Consumer Helpline, such questions are among the most
frequent ones we get. Here’s what you need to know:
For people who work and have job-based
insurance, knowing when to enroll in Medicare falls on them. There is no formal
notification from the Social Security Administration or Medicare. Some people
are misinformed by employers or don’t have reliable information about Medicare
enrollment, leading them to delay enrollment in Medicare Part B and then incur
penalties and high medical costs.
The Rules on Coordinating Medicare and
Employer Coverage
Having job-based insurance does allow you to delay
Medicare enrollment without penalty and delay paying the Medicare Part B
premium (the standard Medicare Part B premium is expected to be $134 a month in
2019). However, it’s important to know whether your job-based insurance will
pay primary or secondary to Medicare.
In most cases, you should only delay
enrollment in Medicare if your job-based insurance is the primary payer
(meaning it pays first for your medical bills) and Medicare is secondary. There
are additional enrollment considerations if you have a Health Savings Account
(HSA); if you enroll in Medicare Part A and/or B, you can no longer contribute
pre-tax dollars to your HSA.
Job-based insurance is primary if it is from
an employer with 20 or more employees. Medicare is secondary in this case, and
some people in this situation choose not to enroll in Medicare Part B so that
they do not have to pay the monthly premium.
Job-based insurance is secondary if it is from
an employer with fewer than 20 employees; Medicare is primary in this case. If
you work at an employer this small and delay Medicare enrollment, your
job-based insurance may provide little or no coverage. That’s why you should
enroll in Medicare Part B to avoid incurring high costs for your care. The
rules are different, however, if you are Medicare-eligible due to a disability
or because you have End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD).
The Medicare Special Enrollment Period
If you are eligible for Medicare because you
are 65 or older and are covered by your job-based insurance or your spouse’s,
you have a Special Enrollment Period (SEP) to enroll in Medicare Part B while
you are covered by job-based insurance and up to eight months after you no
longer have that coverage. This means you aren’t required to take Part B during
your Initial Enrollment Period (IEP), or the seven months surrounding your 65th birthday,
when you become Medicare eligible.
Using the Part B Special Enrollment Period
means you will not have to pay a Part B late enrollment penalty (LEP).
Normally, for every 12 months that people who are Medicare-eligible and not
covered by employer insurance delay enrollment, they accrue a 10% penalty,
which is then added to their monthly Part B premium amount. In most cases, the
penalty lasts for as long as someone has Medicare.
Retiree Coverage, COBRA, Affordable Care Act
and Medicare
Many Medicare-eligible individuals do not know
that employer-offered retiree coverage is almost always secondary to Medicare.
Similarly, health insurance coverage through
COBRA (employer-sponsored coverage you can pay to keep after you leave your
job, usually for up to 18 months) is also always secondary to Medicare
coverage. If you have employer-offered retiree coverage or COBRA, you should
enroll in Medicare when first eligible to avoid possible penalties, higher
medical costs and gaps in coverage.
You should also make sure you understand how
to make Medicare Part B enrollment decisions if you are enrolled in a
Marketplace plan under the Affordable Care Act.
If you have an insurance plan certified by the
Marketplace, known as a Qualified Health Plan, deciding what to do as you
approach Medicare eligibility depends on your circumstances.
If you delayed enrolling in Medicare so you could stay in your Marketplace
plan, you may be eligible to request time-limited equitable relief.
That will let you enroll in Medicare Part B without penalty or eliminate or
reduce your late-enrollment penalty under certain circumstances. The
opportunity to request time-limited equitable relief lasts until September 30,
2018.
For more information on how Medicare works
with other types of health care coverage, visit Medicare Interactive, the Medicare Rights
Center’s free, online resource packed with hundreds of answers to Medicare
questions.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/nextavenue/2018/09/04/how-medicare-coordinates-with-employer-health-care/#6827aac42b08
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