State Profiles Highlight Variations in How
Many Low-Income Medicare Beneficiaries Get Additional Help with Their
Medicare Costs
Medicare beneficiaries
with low incomes and modest assets can qualify for additional financial
help with Medicare premiums and cost sharing through both the Medicare
Savings Programs and Medicare’s Part D Low-Income Subsidy for
prescription drug coverage.
A new
analysis and collection of interactive
profiles highlight variations across states in the number and
characteristics of beneficiaries who receive this additional financial
assistance, including race and ethnicity, gender, and age. These findings
reflect differences between states such as varying poverty rates among
Medicare beneficiaries and higher asset thresholds for the Medicare
Savings Program in some states.
Each profile highlights state-level eligibility requirements for the
Medicare Savings Programs, which are administered by state Medicaid
programs that can choose to adopt more generous income and asset
requirements. Eligibility for the Part D Low-Income Subsidy program does
not vary by state because it is run by the federal Medicare program.
Key takeaways include:
- More
than 10 million Medicare beneficiaries (16% of beneficiaries) were
enrolled in the Medicare Savings Programs. The share of Medicare
beneficiaries enrolled in the Medicare Savings Programs varies from
a low of 7% in North Dakota to a high of 33% in the District of
Columbia.
- Among
the nine states and the District of Columbia that have the highest
share of Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in the Medicare Savings
Programs, eight either do not have an asset test to qualify or have
a higher asset limit than the federal guidelines.
- About
14.1 million Medicare beneficiaries were enrolled in the Part D
Low-Income Subsidy in 2019, including 1.6 million who didn’t receive
full Medicaid benefits and weren’t enrolled in the Medicare Savings
Programs. About 1.1 million met the eligibility requirements for the
Medicare Savings Programs, but were not enrolled, due in part to the
administrative enrollment policies that vary from state to state.
- Compared
to Medicare beneficiaries overall, the Medicare Savings Programs and
Part D Low-Income Subsidy disproportionately serve beneficiaries in
communities of color, beneficiaries under 65 with disabilities, and
women, who tend to have lower incomes and modest savings.
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