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Turning 65

Your Initial Enrollment Period — The 7-Month Window

When you turn 65, you get a 7-month Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) to sign up for Medicare. This is the most important enrollment window you'll ever have. Missing it can cost you for the rest of your life.

⏰ Your 7-month window: Starts 3 months before your 65th birthday month, includes your birthday month, and ends 3 months after. When you sign up during this window determines when your coverage begins.

Your enrollment timeline:

  • 1

    3 months before your birthday month

    Best time to enroll. Coverage starts the 1st of your birthday month. Sign up at ssa.gov or call 1-800-772-1213.

  • 2

    During your birthday month

    Coverage starts the 1st of the month after you enroll. Don't wait — gaps in coverage can be costly.

  • 3

    1–3 months after your birthday month

    Coverage is delayed 1–3 months after enrollment. You'll have a gap with no Medicare coverage.

Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
If you're already receiving Social Security benefits when you turn 65, you'll be automatically enrolled in Parts A and B. Your Medicare card will arrive about 3 months before your 65th birthday. But if you're NOT yet collecting Social Security, you must actively sign up. This catches a lot of people off guard — especially those who plan to delay Social Security past 65.

🗓️ When should I enroll? Quick calculator

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Special Enrollment Period

I Have Employer Coverage — Do I Still Need Medicare?

If you or your spouse have health coverage through a current employer with 20 or more employees, you may be able to delay Medicare Part B without penalty.

✅ You're protected: As long as you have group health plan coverage through your or your spouse's current employer (20+ employees), you won't face a late enrollment penalty for delaying Part B.

Key rules to know:

1
Sign up for Part A at 65 — it's free. Most people should enroll in Part A (hospital insurance) at 65 even if they have employer coverage. It's premium-free if you or your spouse have 40+ work quarters, and it can serve as secondary coverage.
2
You can delay Part B if your employer plan is your "primary" coverage (employer has 20+ employees). You'll get a Special Enrollment Period (SEP) when the employer coverage ends.
3
Your SEP is 8 months after your employer coverage ends (or your employment ends, whichever comes first). Don't wait until the last minute — sign up promptly to avoid gaps.
4
COBRA and retiree coverage do NOT count. These are not considered "current employer" coverage. If you're on COBRA, your Part B penalty clock is ticking. Sign up immediately.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
This is one of the most expensive mistakes I saw as a District Manager. People retire, go on COBRA for 18 months, and think they're covered. But COBRA doesn't protect you from the Part B penalty. By the time they realize it, they owe a permanent 20% or 30% surcharge on their Part B premium — for life. If you're leaving your employer, sign up for Part B during your 8-month SEP. Don't rely on COBRA as a bridge.
📋 Get form CMS-L564: When you sign up for Part B after employer coverage ends, you'll need your employer to fill out form CMS-L564 (Request for Employment Information). This proves you had qualifying coverage and protects you from penalties. Ask your HR department for this before your last day.
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Medicare Basics

The Parts of Medicare — What Each One Covers

Medicare has four parts. Understanding what each covers — and what it costs — is essential to making smart decisions.

Covers: Inpatient hospital stays, skilled nursing facility care (not custodial), hospice care, and some home health care.

2026 Costs:
• Premium: $0 for most people (if you or your spouse have 40+ work quarters). Otherwise $311/month (30-39 quarters) or $565/month.
• Deductible: $1,736 per benefit period (this is per hospital admission, not per year)
• Days 1-60: $0 after deductible
• Days 61-90: $434/day coinsurance
• Lifetime reserve days: $868/day
• Skilled nursing facility days 21-100: $217/day

Key point: Part A does NOT cover long-term care or custodial nursing home care. This is one of the biggest misconceptions about Medicare.
Covers: Doctor visits, outpatient care, preventive services, durable medical equipment, ambulance services, mental health services, and some home health care.

2026 Costs:
• Premium: $202.90/month (standard; higher-income beneficiaries pay more — see IRMAA)
• Deductible: $283/year
• Coinsurance: 20% of Medicare-approved amount after deductible (no out-of-pocket maximum in Original Medicare!)

Key point: Part B has no annual out-of-pocket cap. That's why many people add a Medigap policy or choose Medicare Advantage.
What it is: An alternative way to get your Medicare coverage through a private insurance company. Medicare Advantage plans must cover everything Parts A and B cover, and most include Part D (drug coverage) plus extras like dental, vision, and hearing.

Key features:
• Often $0 additional premium (you still pay Part B premium)
• Usually includes an annual out-of-pocket maximum (unlike Original Medicare)
• May require using in-network providers
• May require prior authorization for certain services

Key point: Medicare Advantage is not "extra" Medicare — it replaces how you receive your Part A and Part B benefits. You're still in Medicare, but a private company manages your care.
Covers: Prescription medications through a private plan. Each plan has its own formulary (list of covered drugs).

2026 Costs:
• Premium: Varies by plan (average ~$46/month)
• Maximum deductible: $615/year
Out-of-pocket cap: $2,100/year — this is new! Starting in 2025, there's a hard cap on what you pay out of pocket for drugs. In 2026, it's $2,100.

Key point: If you don't sign up for Part D when first eligible and don't have other creditable drug coverage, you'll face a permanent late enrollment penalty of 1% of the national base premium per month you delayed.
What it is: A private insurance policy that helps pay for costs Original Medicare doesn't cover — deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments. Medigap works WITH Original Medicare (Parts A and B), not with Medicare Advantage.

Key features:
• Standardized plans (labeled A through N) — same benefits regardless of which company sells it
• Best time to buy: during your 6-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period, which starts the month you turn 65 AND are enrolled in Part B
• During this window, companies cannot deny you or charge more for pre-existing conditions
• After this window, companies can use medical underwriting and may deny you

Key point: You cannot have both Medigap and Medicare Advantage at the same time. Choose one path or the other.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
Here's the decision most people struggle with: Original Medicare + Medigap + Part D vs. Medicare Advantage (Part C). There's no one-size-fits-all answer. Original Medicare gives you more provider choice but can have unlimited out-of-pocket costs without a Medigap policy. Medicare Advantage often has lower premiums and includes extras, but may limit your network. If you want help deciding, Chapter Medicare — Dr. Ed's trusted partner — can walk you through your options for free.
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Critical Information

Late Enrollment Penalties — They Last Forever

If you miss your enrollment windows and don't have qualifying coverage, Medicare charges permanent penalties that are added to your monthly premiums for as long as you have Medicare.

🚨 These penalties never go away. They're recalculated each year as premiums change, and you pay them every single month for the rest of your life. This is one of the most costly mistakes in all of government benefits.

Part B Late Enrollment Penalty

For each full 12-month period you could have had Part B but didn't sign up, your premium goes up by 10%. This is permanent.

Years LatePenalty2026 Monthly Premium
On time0%$202.90
1 year late10%$223.19
2 years late20%$243.48
3 years late30%$263.77
5 years late50%$304.35

Part D Late Enrollment Penalty

For each full month you could have had Part D but didn't sign up (and didn't have creditable drug coverage), your premium goes up by 1% of the national base beneficiary premium. Also permanent.

Example: If you went 24 months without Part D or creditable coverage, your penalty would be 24% of the national base beneficiary premium — added to your Part D premium every month, forever.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
The Part B penalty is the one that really hurts. I've seen people who delayed Part B for 5 years because they didn't understand the rules — and now they pay 50% more every month, forever. That's over $1,200 extra per year in 2026 dollars, and it goes up every year as premiums increase. If you're turning 65 and don't have qualifying employer coverage, sign up for Part B. Period.
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Higher Income?

IRMAA — Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount

If your income is above certain thresholds, you'll pay more for Medicare Part B and Part D. This surcharge is called IRMAA, and it's based on your tax return from 2 years ago (2024 income for 2026 premiums).

2026 Part B IRMAA Brackets

Individual IncomeJoint IncomeTotal Monthly Premium
≤ $109,000≤ $218,000$202.90
$109,001–$137,000$218,001–$274,000$284.10
$137,001–$171,000$274,001–$342,000$405.80
$171,001–$205,000$342,001–$410,000$527.50
$205,001–$499,999$410,001–$749,999$649.20
≥ $500,000≥ $750,000$689.90
📋 Life-changing event? If your income dropped due to retirement, divorce, death of a spouse, or other qualifying event, you can request a reduction by filing SSA form SSA-44 (Medicare Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount — Life-Changing Event). SSA will use your more recent income instead.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
IRMAA catches a lot of new retirees off guard. You retire, your income drops, but your first year of Medicare premiums are based on your last working year's income. File SSA-44 immediately if you've had a life-changing event. I've seen people save thousands of dollars a year by filing this one simple form. You can do it at your local Social Security office or by mail.

Disability & Medicare

Medicare for People on SSDI — What to Expect

If you receive Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), you become eligible for Medicare after a waiting period. Here's how it works.

The timeline:

  • 1

    You're approved for SSDI

    Your 5-month waiting period for SSDI cash benefits begins from your disability onset date.

  • 2

    24 months of SSDI benefits

    After receiving SSDI for 24 months (counted from your entitlement date, not your application date), you automatically qualify for Medicare.

  • 3

    Automatic enrollment in Parts A & B

    You'll be automatically enrolled in both Part A and Part B. Your Medicare card will arrive about 3 months before your Medicare start date.

  • 4

    You'll need to choose Part D separately

    Drug coverage is not automatic. You'll have a 7-month Initial Enrollment Period for Part D starting 3 months before your Medicare eligibility date.

Exceptions — No 24-month wait: If you have ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease), your Medicare begins the same month as your SSDI. If you have End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), Medicare can begin as early as the first month of dialysis or the month of a kidney transplant.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
The 24-month wait is one of the cruelest gaps in our system. You're disabled enough to qualify for SSDI, but you have to wait 2 years for health coverage. During that gap, look into Medicaid (if your income is low enough), COBRA (if you had employer coverage), or Marketplace coverage (you qualify for a Special Enrollment Period when you lose employer coverage). Don't go without health insurance during this waiting period if you can help it.

What happens when you turn 65?

If you're already on Medicare through disability when you turn 65, your coverage simply continues. You transition from disability-based Medicare to age-based Medicare automatically. You'll get a new Medigap Open Enrollment Period at 65 — this is your chance to buy a Medigap policy with guaranteed issue rights.

Missed Your Window

I Missed My Enrollment — What Now?

If you missed your Initial Enrollment Period and don't qualify for a Special Enrollment Period, here's what you need to know.

🚨 Don't panic — but act fast. You can still sign up, but you may face penalties and a gap in coverage. The sooner you act, the better.

Your options:

If you missed your IEP, you can sign up during the General Enrollment Period each year, from January 1 through March 31. Your coverage will start the 1st of the month after you enroll (this changed in 2023 — it used to be July 1). You'll likely face the Part B late enrollment penalty (10% per year delayed, permanent).

How to sign up: Visit ssa.gov, call 1-800-772-1213, or visit your local Social Security office.
You may qualify for a SEP if:
• You or your spouse had employer coverage that recently ended
• You recently moved out of your plan's service area
• You lost Medicaid coverage
• You qualify for Extra Help/LIS
• You were affected by a natural disaster or emergency

The employer coverage SEP is 8 months from when the coverage or employment ends (whichever is first). If you qualify, there's no penalty and coverage starts sooner than the GEP.
The Part B late enrollment penalty generally cannot be waived. However, there are a few situations where you may be able to get relief:

Equitable relief: If SSA or CMS gave you incorrect information that caused you to miss enrollment, you may be able to request equitable relief. Document everything.
If you had qualifying coverage: If you can prove you had employer group coverage during the gap, the penalty may be removed.
Medicare Savings Programs: If you qualify for a Medicare Savings Program (QMB), your state will pay your Part B premium including the penalty.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
If you missed enrollment because of bad advice from SSA, an employer, or an insurance agent — document it. I've seen cases where people were told by their HR department that COBRA counted as employer coverage (it doesn't), or where SSA gave incorrect information. In these cases, you can request equitable relief from CMS. It's not guaranteed, but it's worth pursuing. Keep every letter, email, and note from phone calls.

Already Enrolled

You're on Medicare — Are You Getting Everything?

Many people on Medicare don't know about programs that could save them hundreds or thousands of dollars a year. Let's check.

Quick checklist — are you taking advantage of these?

1
Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs) — If your income is limited, your state may pay your Part B premium, deductibles, and coinsurance. Many people who qualify don't know these programs exist.
2
Extra Help / Low Income Subsidy (LIS) — Helps pay for Part D prescription drug costs. If you qualify, you could save an average of $5,000 per year on medications.
3
Annual plan review — During Open Enrollment (October 15 – December 7), review your Medicare Advantage or Part D plan. Plans change their formularies, networks, and costs every year. What worked last year may not be the best choice this year.
4
Preventive services — Medicare covers many preventive services at no cost, including annual wellness visits, flu shots, cancer screenings, and more. Take advantage of these — they're free with no deductible or copay.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
The #1 thing I tell people already on Medicare: check if you qualify for a Medicare Savings Program. Millions of people qualify but don't apply. If you're single with income under about $1,616/month, you may qualify for SLMB — which means your state pays your entire Part B premium ($202.90/month = $2,435/year saved). And if you qualify for any MSP, you automatically get Extra Help with drug costs too. It takes one phone call to your state Medicaid office to find out.
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Financial Help

Programs That Help Pay for Medicare

If you have limited income and resources, several programs can help cover your Medicare costs — from premiums to prescriptions. Many people qualify but never apply.

Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs) — 2026 Income Limits

These are state-run programs that help pay Medicare costs. Apply through your state Medicaid office.

ProgramWhat It PaysIndividual IncomeCouple Income
QMBPart A & B premiums, deductibles, coinsurance, copays≤ $1,350/mo≤ $1,824/mo
SLMBPart B premium≤ $1,616/mo≤ $2,184/mo
QIPart B premium≤ $1,816/mo≤ $2,455/mo
QDWIPart A premiumFor disabled workers who lost Part A
Resource limits (2026): $9,950 for individuals, $14,910 for couples. Resources include bank accounts and investments but NOT your home, one car, burial funds, or personal belongings. Some states have higher limits or no resource test at all.
Bonus: If you qualify for ANY Medicare Savings Program, you automatically qualify for Extra Help with prescription drug costs (Part D). That's two benefits for one application.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
QMB is the gold standard of Medicare help. If you qualify, you pay virtually nothing for Medicare — no premiums, no deductibles, no coinsurance. And here's the thing most people don't know: providers cannot bill you for anything Medicare covers if you're in QMB. If a doctor tries to charge you a copay, show them your QMB card. It's illegal for them to bill you. I've seen too many QMB beneficiaries pay bills they never should have received.
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Prescription Drug Help

Extra Help / Low Income Subsidy (LIS)

Extra Help is a federal program that helps people with limited income and resources pay for Medicare Part D prescription drug costs. It can save you an average of $5,000 per year.

What Extra Help covers:

Monthly Part D premiums — reduced or eliminated
Annual deductible — reduced or eliminated (standard max is $615 in 2026)
Prescription copayments — reduced to as low as $0 for generics and $0 for brand-name drugs (full subsidy) or $5.10/$12.65 (partial subsidy)

2026 Eligibility (approximate):

SituationIncome Limit (150% FPL)Resource Limit
Individual≤ $1,995/month≤ $17,220
Couple≤ $2,705/month≤ $34,360
How to apply: Apply online at ssa.gov/extrahelp, call Social Security at 1-800-772-1213, or visit your local Social Security office. You can also apply through your state Medicaid office — if you apply for an MSP, you may automatically get Extra Help too.
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
Extra Help is one of the most underused benefits in America. SSA estimates that millions of people who qualify never apply. If you're on Medicare and your income is under about $2,000/month as an individual, you should apply. There's no downside — if you don't qualify, nothing happens. If you do, you could save thousands on medications every year. And here's a bonus: qualifying for Extra Help gives you a Special Enrollment Period to switch Part D plans at any time, not just during Open Enrollment.

Key Dates

Medicare Enrollment Periods — When You Can Make Changes

Medicare has specific windows when you can enroll, switch plans, or make changes. Missing these windows means waiting — sometimes months.

When: 3 months before your 65th birthday month + birthday month + 3 months after.
What you can do: Sign up for Part A, Part B, Part D, Medicare Advantage, and Medigap.
Why it matters: This is your best window. Enrolling early means coverage starts sooner and you avoid penalties.
When: Every year, January 1 – March 31.
What you can do: Sign up for Part A and/or Part B if you missed your IEP.
Coverage starts: The 1st of the month after you enroll (changed in 2023 — no longer July 1).
Penalty: You'll likely face the Part B late enrollment penalty (10% per year delayed, permanent).
When: Every year, October 15 – December 7.
What you can do: Switch Medicare Advantage plans, switch Part D plans, go from Original Medicare to Medicare Advantage (or vice versa), add or drop Part D coverage.
Coverage starts: January 1 of the following year.
Key point: This is the time to review your plan every year. Drug formularies and provider networks change annually.
When: Every year, January 1 – March 31.
What you can do: If you're in a Medicare Advantage plan, you can switch to a different MA plan or drop MA and return to Original Medicare (and join a Part D plan and buy Medigap, subject to underwriting).
Coverage starts: The first of the month after the plan gets your request.
Limit: You can only make one change during this period.
You may get a Special Enrollment Period if:
Employer coverage ends — 8 months for Part B; 2 months for Part D/MA
You move out of your plan's service area
You lose Medicaid or other coverage
You qualify for Extra Help/LIS — you can switch Part D plans once per quarter
Your plan is terminated or leaves your area
You're in an institution (nursing home, etc.)
Natural disaster or other emergency declared by CMS
Dr. Ed's Insider Tip
Mark October 15 on your calendar every year. That's when Open Enrollment starts, and it's your annual chance to make sure you're in the best plan. I've seen people save hundreds of dollars just by switching Part D plans because their medications moved to a different tier. Use Medicare's Plan Finder at medicare.gov to compare plans — enter your specific drugs and pharmacy, and it'll show you the cheapest option.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

It depends on your employer's size. If your employer has 20 or more employees, your employer plan is primary and you can delay Part B without penalty. You should still sign up for Part A (it's free). If your employer has fewer than 20 employees, Medicare is primary — you should sign up for both Part A and Part B at 65, or your employer plan may not pay claims properly.
VA coverage is not considered creditable coverage for Medicare purposes. If you only have VA care and don't sign up for Part B at 65, you'll face the late enrollment penalty if you want Part B later. Many veterans sign up for Part A (free) and Part B at 65 to have both VA and Medicare options. However, VA coverage IS considered creditable for Part D purposes, so you won't face a Part D penalty.
Yes. People who qualify for both are called "dual eligibles." If you have both, Medicaid may help pay your Medicare premiums, deductibles, and copays. Medicaid may also cover services Medicare doesn't, like long-term care and dental. Contact your state Medicaid office to see if you qualify.
Medicare generally does NOT cover:
• Long-term care (custodial care in a nursing home)
• Most dental care, dentures, and dental procedures
• Eye exams for glasses, eyeglasses, or contact lenses
• Hearing aids and hearing exams for fitting hearing aids
• Routine foot care
• Cosmetic surgery
• Care outside the U.S. (with limited exceptions)

Note: Many Medicare Advantage plans DO cover some of these (dental, vision, hearing). This is one reason people choose MA over Original Medicare.
For Parts A and B:
• Online at ssa.gov/medicare (fastest method)
• Call Social Security at 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778)
• Visit your local Social Security office

For Part D and Medicare Advantage (Part C):
• Use the Medicare Plan Finder at medicare.gov
• Call the plan directly
• Call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227)
• Work with a licensed insurance agent or broker
Some Medicare Advantage plans offer a Part B premium reduction (sometimes called a "give-back" benefit). This means the plan pays part or all of your Part B premium, reducing the amount deducted from your Social Security check. Not all MA plans offer this — check the plan details during Open Enrollment. The maximum give-back in 2026 is $202.90/month (the full Part B premium).
Yes, but timing matters. You can switch during:
Open Enrollment (Oct 15 – Dec 7) — coverage starts Jan 1
MA Open Enrollment Period (Jan 1 – Mar 31) — one change allowed

Important: If you switch back to Original Medicare, you may want a Medigap policy. But after your initial Medigap Open Enrollment Period (at age 65), insurance companies can use medical underwriting and may deny you or charge higher premiums based on your health. Some states have additional Medigap protections — check your state's rules.

Need personalized Medicare help?

Chapter Medicare is Dr. Ed's trusted partner for free, unbiased Medicare guidance. They can help you compare plans, understand your options, and enroll — at no cost to you.

Call Now: 352-841-0632

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