Published Sat, Oct
26 20199:45 AM EDT Sarah O’Brien@sarahtgobrien
Key
Points
·
Medicare supplemental
plans, also called Medigap, come with their own set of rules for enrolling or
disenrolling.
·
If you drop one to go
to an Advantage Plan for the first time during the current open enrollment
period, you get a year to change your mind.
·
Anyone who doesn’t
meet an exception and is returning to original Medicare should make sure they
can definitely qualify for Medigap before locking in the switch.
If you’re going to make Medicare coverage
changes that include dropping or buying a supplemental plan — aka, Medigap —
make sure you know the rules that come along with it.
Medicare’s annual open enrollment period — now underway
through Dec. 7 — allows you to switch various parts of your coverage for next
year. And while that can be a straightforward yearly change for many people,
others might run into snags if it involves Medigap.
Those plans, which are sold by private insurance
companies, help cover cost-sharing aspects of original Medicare
— Part A hospital coverage and Part B outpatient coverage — including copays
and coinsurance. They also come with their own set of rules.
For starters, when you first enroll in Part B,
you get six months to buy a Medigap policy without an insurance company nosing
through your health history and deciding whether to insure you. After that,
unless you meet a special exception or live in a state with no restrictions on
enrolling, you typically must go through medical underwriting.
Three states — New York, Connecticut and
Massachusetts — have year-round open enrollment for Medigap and a handful of
others allow some degree in flexibility in enrolling or switching plans.
Medigap policies also can only be paired with
original Medicare. In other words, if you choose to go with an Advantage Plan —
which includes Parts A and B and typically Part D prescription drug coverage — Medigap
won’t work with it.
Here’s what to know if you want to buy or drop a
Medigap policy during open enrollment as part of your changes for 2020.
Going to an Advantage Plan
If you are moving from original Medicare to an
Advantage Plan, you’ll have to drop your Medigap policy.
However, if it’s your first time trying out an
Advantage Plan, you get a year to change your mind.
“That 12-month trial period lets you revert back
to the Medigap plan you were previously enrolled in if you end up not liking
Medicare Advantage,” said Elizabeth Gavino, founder of Lewin & Gavino in
New York and an independent broker and general agent for Medicare plans.re costs down in retirement
If you stay on the Advantage Plan for more than
a year and then change your mind, though, you’ll have to go through
underwriting for a Medigap policy unless you live in a state that does not
require it.
Also be aware that when you switch to the
Advantage Plan, you’ll need to cancel the Medigap policy on your own because it
does not go through the Medicare program. The policy is with a private insurer
that bills you.
Gavino had a client who forgot to notify the
insurer, which meant her Medigap premiums were still being deducted from a bank
account for about a year after she switched to an Advantage Plan.
“My client had to fight with the carrier to get
reimbursed,” Gavino said.
On the other hand, if you also had a standalone
prescription drug option and are switching to an Advantage Plan, that drug plan
will be automatically canceled when your new coverage takes effect Jan. 1.
Dropping your Advantage Plan
This move can be a bit trickier because your
ability to get a Medigap policy when you switch to original Medicare is not a
given.
Again, unless you are trying out an Advantage
Plan for the first time and are within the first year of that coverage, you
might have to go through underwriting for a Medigap policy.
Except for in a handful of states that don’t
require it, this means the insurance company needs to assess your health. If
you have a chronic or pre-existing condition, you might be charged more or denied
coverage altogether.
So before dropping your Advantage Plan, you
should make sure you can get the Medigap policy.
“If you wait too long and the underwriting
doesn’t get done by Dec. 7, you could find out after that the insurer won’t
cover you,” said Danielle Roberts, co-founder of insurance firm Boomer Benefits
in Fort Worth, Texas. “Then you’d have no Advantage Plan and no Medigap for
next year.”
Also, dropping an Advantage Plan means that if
you want prescription drug coverage, you’ll have to get a standalone Part D
plan. Incidentally, Medigap does not pay any costs associated with that part of
Medicare.
If you won’t qualify for a Medigap policy, you
can stay with the Advantage Plan (or move to another one) if you want the
additional insurance.
No comments:
Post a Comment