Should I keep Medicare if I live abroad?
Medicare doesn't follow you abroad. People learn that the hard way. After 20 years at SSA, I sat with hundreds of expats and dual-residents who lost coverage, paid permanent penalties, or assumed Medicare worked overseas like the VA does. It usually doesn't. This page walks you through what stays, what goes, and what it costs to come back.
Dr. Ed Weir, PhD · 20 years inside Social Security · "Former" Sergeant, USMC
Updated April 2026
Should I keep Medicare if I live abroad?
Medicare almost never pays for care outside the US. Most expats keep Part A (it's free with 40 work quarters), then make a careful Part B keep-or-drop call. Dropping Part B saves $202.90 but triggers a permanent 10% / yr Late Enrollment Penalty if you re-enroll later.
Most expat questions don't fit neatly into a US help line. Use these contacts before anything else:
Free help if you're returning to the US
Chapter Medicare is a free service with licensed advisors who can help if you're moving back to the US and need to navigate Medicare. Tell them Dr. Ed sent you.
Your action plan
Here's the order I'd work this in. None of it is urgent if you're already settled abroad — but if you're about to move, do step 1 this week.
1. Confirm what Medicare actually pays for abroad
Read Medicare's foreign travel rules at medicare.gov/coverage/travel-coverage. Short version: Medicare pays nothing for routine care outside the US, and only pays in three narrow border or emergency exceptions (42 CFR 424.122). Don't assume it works like the VA, TRICARE for Life, or FEHB — it doesn't.
Medicare foreign travel rules ›2. Decide on Part A (almost always: keep it)
If you have 40+ work quarters, Part A is premium-free. There's no reason to drop it — it costs nothing and covers you the moment you set foot back in a US hospital. If you have fewer than 40 quarters, Part A has a premium (around $523/month in 2026) and the math gets harder. Call SSA at 1-800-772-1213 or your nearest Federal Benefits Unit at a US Embassy to confirm your quarter count.
SSA Federal Benefits Units abroad ›3. Run the Part B keep-or-drop math
Part B costs $202.90/month in 2026 (more with IRMAA). Over a year that's $2,434.80 you can't use abroad. But: drop Part B and re-enroll later, you pay a permanent 10% per 12 months Late Enrollment Penalty. Five years off Part B = 50% extra premium for life. Run the math against how long you'll be abroad and your chance of returning. This is the call I'd take to SHIP or a fee-only planner.
Find your SHIP ›4. Hang up on cold-call Medicare sales pitches
If someone calls you to sell you a Medicare plan, hang up. Cold-call Medicare solicitation is prohibited under CMS marketing rules. This applies whether you're in Ohio or Oaxaca — the scammers find expat retirees through public records. No legitimate Medicare resource (SSA, SHIP, Chapter, Medicare itself) will cold-call you to pitch a plan. Report it to 1-800-MEDICARE.
Report Medicare fraud ›The numbers that matter
Find your situation
Pick the situation closest to yours. None of these are legal or financial advice — they're starting points for a longer conversation with SHIP or a fee-only planner.
I just moved abroad — should I keep Part B?Depends on a handful of facts I can't see from here.
Honest answer: it depends. The math turns on how long you'll be abroad, whether you have foreign or expat insurance, your age, and whether you'd take a permanent Late Enrollment Penalty hit if you ever come back.
For most people in their 60s and 70s with stable foreign coverage and a likely permanent move, dropping Part B saves $202.90/month in 2026 ($2,434.80/year) — real money. But the 10% per 12 months penalty is permanent. Drop for 5 years and re-enroll, your Part B premium is 50% higher for life.
This is exactly the call I'd take to SHIP (free) or a fee-only financial planner. Don't decide based on what a friend on a Facebook group did.
I can show you the rules and the math. I can't tell you whether to keep Part B — that depends on your foreign coverage, your age, your return plans, and your tax situation. Take this to SHIP or a fee-only fiduciary planner.
I've been abroad for years — what are my re-enrollment options?You can re-enroll, but the penalty is permanent.
If you dropped Part B (or never enrolled) and now want it back, you re-enroll during the General Enrollment Period: January 1 through March 31 each year. Coverage starts the month after you enroll.
The Late Enrollment Penalty is 10% of the standard premium for every 12 months you went without Part B when you were eligible. It's permanent — you pay it for as long as you have Part B. Three years off = 30% extra. Ten years off = 100% extra (your premium doubles).
There's no Special Enrollment Period for moving back to the US. The SEPs are for people who had employer coverage, not for people who lived abroad.
Don't assume the penalty wears off. It doesn't. Every month you pay Part B for the rest of your life will be 10% higher per year you went without. Run the lifetime cost before you decide.
I'm in Canada or Mexico right at the US border — does Medicare ever pay?Yes, in three narrow exceptions — not for routine care.
Medicare pays for foreign hospital care in three specific situations under 42 CFR 424.122:
1. You're in the US and have a medical emergency, but the closest hospital that can treat you is in Canada or Mexico.
2. You're traveling through Canada by the most direct route between Alaska and another US state without unreasonable delay, and you have an emergency where a Canadian hospital is closer than any US hospital.
3. You live in the US, but a foreign hospital is closer to your home than the nearest US hospital that could treat your condition (whether it's an emergency or not).
These are narrow. They don't help you if you live in Mexico year-round and want routine care. They help if you're, say, in Buffalo and the closest trauma center is in Ontario.
I saw maybe a dozen of these claims in 20 years. They exist, they get paid, but they're rare and the documentation is heavy. Keep your hospital records and bills.
I have a Medigap policy — does it cover me abroad?Some plans cover foreign emergencies. Limited.
Medigap plans C, D, F, G, M, and N include a foreign travel emergency benefit. The structure is:
- $250 deductible - 80% coverage of approved costs after the deductible - 60-day cap per trip - $50,000 lifetime limit
It's emergency-only. It won't pay for a planned surgery in Thailand or routine care in Portugal. And it's tied to having Part B — if you drop Part B, your Medigap usually goes too.
Medicare Advantage plans are different. Some MA plans include emergency coverage abroad, but networks are US-only. If you're a full-time expat, MA is rarely useful.
Read your Medigap Outline of Coverage — not a sales brochure. The foreign benefit is real but capped, and a single hospitalization can blow through the lifetime limit.
I split time between abroad and the USKeep Part B for your US visits.
If you spend meaningful time in the US — say, summers in Maine and winters in Costa Rica — keeping Part B usually makes sense. The premium ($202.90/month in 2026) buys you coverage every time you're back on US soil.
Medicare doesn't care where you live for premium purposes. It cares where the care is delivered. As long as you're physically in the US (50 states, DC, Puerto Rico, Guam, USVI, American Samoa, Northern Mariana Islands) when you get the service, Part B pays normally.
The main thing: keep a US address on file with SSA and Medicare so bills, premium notices, and Medicare Summary Notices reach you. A trusted family member's address works.
If your time split is genuinely 50/50, the math almost always favors keeping Part B. If you're 90% abroad, run it carefully — you may be paying $2,400/year for two doctor visits.
I'm planning to return to the US in 6 monthsRe-enroll in Part B 3 months before you return.
If you dropped Part B and you're moving back, the worst path is waiting until after you arrive. By then you've missed your re-enrollment window and you're stuck waiting for the next General Enrollment Period (January 1 – March 31), then waiting until the following month for coverage.
Better path: re-enroll during the next General Enrollment Period that lands at least 1–2 months before your return date. You'll have Part B in hand the day you land.
While you're at it, look at Medigap. Some states require Medigap insurers to offer coverage to anyone who enrolls in Part B regardless of health (guaranteed issue). Most states don't. Check with your state's insurance department before you assume Medigap will be available.
If you've been off Part B and you have any health conditions, Medigap underwriting in most states can deny you. New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, and a handful of others have stronger protections — most don't.
I'm helping my parent who lives abroad navigate MedicareYou're the bystander — here's what helps.
If you're in the US trying to sort Medicare out for a parent overseas, you'll hit two recurring problems: the time zones and the documentation.
First, get an SSA Form 1696 (Appointment of Representative) signed if your parent wants you handling things directly with SSA. Without it, SSA can't talk to you about their record.
Second, use the SSA Federal Benefits Unit at the US Embassy nearest your parent. They can do a lot remotely and they understand the international rules cold.
Third, for non-Medicare emergencies, Overseas Citizens Services at 1-888-407-4747 is the right starting point.
For Medicare-specific decisions (keep or drop Part B, Medigap timing), SHIP at is free and unbiased.
The Federal Benefits Unit at a US Embassy is the most underused resource for expat families. They handle hundreds of these cases a year and they're free.
My situation is different from theseMost expat Medicare cases are unique. Get a real conversation.
Expat cases are the most situation-specific Medicare cases I ever worked. Dual citizenship, totalization agreements, host-country national health systems, foreign employer coverage, federal employee retirees with FEHB, military retirees with TRICARE for Life — each combination changes the math.
If none of the situations above match, here's where to start:
1. SHIP () for free, unbiased Medicare counseling. 2. SSA Federal Benefits Unit at the US Embassy nearest you for SSA and Medicare premium questions. 3. A fee-only fiduciary financial planner (not commission-based) for the keep-or-drop decision if there's serious money at stake.
Don't take this from a Facebook expat group. The rules are too specific and the penalties are too permanent.
I'd rather you spend 30 minutes with SHIP for free than make this call based on a website, mine included.
Related Medicare topics
If you're sorting out Medicare from abroad, these pages cover the rules that touch your decision.
Medicare Late Enrollment Penalty
The permanent penalty that hits you if you drop Part B abroad and re-enroll later. 10% per 12 months, for life.
Medicare Enrollment Periods
Initial Enrollment, General Enrollment, Special Enrollment — which one applies when you return from abroad.
Medicare Part B Explained
What Part B covers, what it costs, and what dropping it actually means — the core decision for most expats.
Medicare Part A Explained
Premium-free for most. Covers hospital care when you're back in the US. Almost no reason to drop it.
IRMAA (High-Income Premium Surcharge)
If your income is high, your Part B premium is higher — which changes the keep-or-drop math abroad.
Medigap Supplement Insurance
Some Medigap plans include foreign emergency travel benefits. Useful for travelers, limited for full-time expats.
Common questions from expats
Should I keep Medicare if I live abroad?
Most people keep Part A because it's free with 40 work quarters and pays the day you set foot back in a US hospital. Part B is the real decision — it costs $202.90/month in 2026 and doesn't cover routine care abroad. Drop it to save the premium, but you face a permanent Late Enrollment Penalty if you re-enroll. Run the math against how long you'll be abroad and bring it to SHIP or a fee-only planner.
Does Medicare cover me when I'm in another country?
Almost never. Medicare generally pays only for services received in the US — the 50 states, DC, Puerto Rico, Guam, USVI, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands. Three narrow exceptions exist for emergencies near the Canadian or Mexican border, and they're spelled out in 42 CFR 424.122. They don't help typical full-time expats.
What are the foreign hospital exceptions?
Three: (1) emergency in the US where the closest hospital is in Canada or Mexico; (2) traveling through Canada by the most direct route between Alaska and another US state when an emergency requires a Canadian hospital; (3) you live in the US but a foreign hospital is closer to your home than any US hospital that can treat you. They're narrow and require documentation. Most expats don't qualify.
Should I drop Part B to save money?
Maybe. The premium is $202.90/month in 2026 — $2,434.80/year you can't use abroad. But re-enrolling later triggers a 10% per 12 months Late Enrollment Penalty, permanent for as long as you have Part B. The math depends on how long you'll be abroad, your age, your foreign coverage, and your odds of returning. This is exactly the call to take to SHIP (free) or a fee-only fiduciary planner.
What happens if I want to re-enroll in Part B later?
You re-enroll during the General Enrollment Period: January 1 through March 31. Coverage starts the month after you enroll. The Late Enrollment Penalty is 10% added to your standard premium for every 12-month period you went without Part B when eligible. It's permanent. Three years off = 30% extra. Ten years off = your premium doubles. There is no Special Enrollment Period for moving back to the US.
Should I keep Part A?
Yes, almost always, if it's premium-free (40+ work quarters). It costs nothing and covers hospital care the moment you're back on US soil. If you have fewer than 40 quarters and pay a Part A premium (around $523/month in 2026), the math gets harder — dropping may make sense for full-time expats with no plans to return.
Does my Medigap policy cover me abroad?
Some do, partially. Medigap plans C, D, F, G, M, and N include a foreign travel emergency benefit: 80% coverage after a $250 deductible, 60-day cap per trip, $50,000 lifetime limit, emergencies only. It won't pay for routine care abroad. And if you drop Part B, you usually lose your Medigap too.
What about Medicare Advantage abroad?
Medicare Advantage networks are usually US-only. Some MA plans cover emergencies abroad, but the rules vary plan to plan and routine care is rarely covered. If you're a full-time expat, Medicare Advantage is rarely useful. Read the plan's Evidence of Coverage — not a marketing brochure — to see what's covered outside the US.
How do I pay Medicare premiums from abroad?
Three ways: (1) automatic deduction from Social Security if you're collecting; (2) Medicare Easy Pay automatic debit from a US bank account — the most reliable for expats; (3) paper bills (CMS-500) mailed to a US address. SSA can mail bills internationally but it's slow and unreliable. Keep a US bank account and a trusted US mailing address — your life is easier.
Where can I get free help with this decision?
Three free resources: (1) SHIP — State Health Insurance Assistance Program — at or shiphelp.org. Free, unbiased Medicare counseling. (2) The SSA Federal Benefits Unit at the US Embassy nearest you for SSA and premium questions. (3) Overseas Citizens Services at 1-888-407-4747 for non-Medicare emergencies. Cold-call Medicare solicitation is prohibited under CMS rules — if someone calls to sell you a plan, hang up.
Sources
Every figure and rule on this page is verified against primary sources. Last verified 2026.
- Section 1862(a)(4) of the Social Security Act excludes from Medicare coverage items and services not provided within the United States. —ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- SSA operates Federal Benefits Units at US Embassies and Consulates worldwide to help expats with Social Security and Medicare premium issues. —ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- SSA totalization agreements (with 30+ countries) coordinate Social Security work credits across borders for benefit eligibility but do NOT extend Medicare coverage abroad. —ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- POMS HI 00805 series covers Medicare premium billing, enrollment evidence, and SEP/equitable-relief procedures; POMS HI 01001 series covers Part B premium billing, termination, and reinstatement, … —secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- The 2026 standard Medicare Part B premium is $202.90/month. —cms.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Part B Late Enrollment Penalty is 10% of the standard premium for each full 12-month period a person could have had Part B but didn't, and the penalty is generally permanent. —medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- The Medicare General Enrollment Period runs January 1 through March 31 each year, with coverage beginning the month after enrollment. —medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medigap plans C, D, F, G, M, and N include a foreign travel emergency benefit: 80% coverage of approved costs after a $250 annual deductible, with a $50,000 lifetime limit. —medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medigap foreign travel emergency benefit pays 80% of billed charges after the $250 deductible, for medically necessary emergency care beginning within the first 60 days of each trip outside the US. —medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Premium-free Part A is available to people aged 65+ with at least 40 quarters of Medicare-covered employment (or via spouse). —medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- CMS Medicare Communications and Marketing Guidelines (MCMG) prohibit unsolicited contact (cold calls, door-to-door, unsolicited email) by Medicare plan agents and brokers to market plans. —cms.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicare premium billing for beneficiaries not collecting Social Security uses CMS-500 (Medicare Premium Bill) and can be paid via Medicare Easy Pay (automatic debit) or by mail. —medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicare beneficiaries living abroad who need to contact Medicare directly can call 1-410-786-3000 (not toll-free internationally); within the US, 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227). —medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicare generally pays only for services received inside the United States, defined at 42 CFR 400.200 to include the 50 states, DC, Puerto Rico, Guam, US Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicare's foreign-hospital exceptions are codified across 42 CFR 424.122 and 42 CFR 424.124: § 424.122 covers emergency inpatient hospital services in a foreign hospital when (1) the emergency … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- US Department of State Overseas Citizens Services can be reached at 1-888-407-4747 (from the US/Canada) for emergency assistance to US citizens abroad. —travel.state.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- SHIP (State Health Insurance Assistance Program) provides free, unbiased Medicare counseling at and via shiphelp.org. —shiphelp.org(verified 2026-04-28)
Helping a parent or family member abroad?
If you're in the US trying to sort this out for a parent, sibling, or spouse who lives overseas, the rules are the same but the logistics get harder. Start with Overseas Citizens Services at 1-888-407-4747 for emergencies, then loop in SHIP at for Medicare specifics.
Get the bystander guideGet the expat Medicare checklist
I put together a one-page checklist that covers Part A, Part B, Medigap foreign travel, and re-enrollment timing. Free.
I don't sell anything. No plan pitches. No cold calls — CMS prohibits that anyway.
