Medicare includes four distinct parts Part A (hospital insurance), Part B (medical services), Part C (Medicare Advantage), and Part D (prescription drugs) each covering different aspects of healthcare. Choosing the right combination depends on your medical needs, budget, and whether you prefer traditional Medicare or bundled private plans.
You become eligible for Medicare at age 65, whether retired or still working. If you already receive Social Security benefits, enrollment in Parts A and B is automatic, and your Medicare card arrives by mail. Individuals under 65 who have received Social Security disability benefits for 24 months are also automatically enrolled in Parts A and B.
As of August 2024, over 67 million Americans were enrolled in Medicare, reflecting the program’s critical role in providing healthcare coverage for seniors, individuals with disabilities, and those with qualifying medical conditions. This growing enrollment underscores the importance of understanding your Medicare options and selecting the right combination of Parts A, B, C, and D to meet your healthcare needs.
Medicare Part A helps cover hospital-related expenses, including inpatient care, skilled nursing facility stays, hospice services, and home health care. Most enrollees pay no monthly premium if they or their spouse contributed Medicare payroll taxes for at least 10 years. For those who didn’t, the 2025 Part A premium is either $285 or $518 per month, depending on work history.
Before coverage begins, a $1,676 deductible applies in 2025 (up from $1,632 in 2024). After meeting the deductible, you pay $0 for the first 60 days of inpatient care. Co-payments kick in for longer stays, and after 150 days, you’re responsible for the full cost of hospitalization.
Hospice care is also covered under Part A, but only if arranged through a Medicare-approved hospice provider. This ensures compliance with federal standards and eligibility for full benefits.
Medicare Part B covers a wide range of outpatient medical services, including doctor visits, lab tests, durable medical equipment, home health care, and mental health treatment. It also includes preventive care such as cardiac rehab, mammograms, diabetes screenings, flu shots, and other essential services.
In 2025, the monthly premium for Part B is $185 for individuals earning up to $103,000 (or couples earning up to $206,000), up from $174.70 in 2024. This premium is automatically deducted from your Social Security benefits.
You’re not required to enroll in Part B if you have creditable coverage through an employer or spouse’s plan. However, if you delay enrollment without qualifying coverage, you may face late enrollment penalties when you sign up later.
Part B coverage begins after you meet the annual deductible of $257 (up from $240 in 2024). After that, you pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount for services, assuming your provider accepts Medicare assignment.
Medicare Part B requires you to pay 20% of approved medical costs after meeting the annual deductible, with no cap on out-of-pocket expenses. For example, if your medical bills total $100,000 in a year, you could owe $20,000 plus any costs under Parts A and D. Unlike many private insurance plans, Medicare has no lifetime maximum, which can expose retirees to significant financial risk without supplemental coverage.
Financial advisor Kathryn B. Hauer warns that serious illnesses like cancer can devastate retirement savings, especially for Medicare recipients without supplemental coverage. According to her analysis, Medicare users without Medigap spend 25% to 64% of their income on medical expenses, exposing retirees to significant financial strain. To reduce out-of-pocket costs and protect long-term financial health, consider adding Medigap coverage to fill gaps left by Parts A and B.
Traditional Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover dental care, vision exams, hearing aids, or long-term care in assisted-living facilities, nursing homes, or at home. These exclusions can leave retirees vulnerable to high out-of-pocket costs for essential services.
Medicare will cover acute-care hospital services for patients transferred from intensive or critical care units, including treatments like head trauma care or respiratory therapy. However, coverage is subject to deductibles and tapers off after 60 days of inpatient care.
Financial expert Carlos Dias Jr. emphasizes that Medicare was never designed to cover long-term care. To manage these costs, retirees should explore long-term care insurance, life insurance policies with long-term care riders, specialized annuities, or life settlements that convert existing policies into usable funds for care expenses.
Medicare Part C, or Medicare Advantage, is offered by private insurers under federal contract and typically bundles Parts A, B, and D covering hospital care, outpatient services, and prescription drugs. These plans often include extra benefits like dental, vision, and hearing coverage not offered by Original Medicare.
If you enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan, you’ll still pay your Part B premium, and some providers may charge an additional monthly premium. You can choose to have these payments automatically deducted from your Social Security benefit, including any Part D-related fees.
While Medicare Advantage offers convenience and added services, it’s important to review plan details carefully. Some plans don’t include Part D coverage, and many have limited provider networks, which may restrict your choice of doctors or specialists.
Medicare Part D is an optional drug benefit managed by private insurers and often bundled into Medicare Advantage plans. Depending on your plan, you may face an annual deductible and co-payments before coverage kicks in for eligible prescriptions.
In 2024, Medicare Part D included a coverage gap known as the “donut hole”, triggered once you and your plan spent $5,030 on prescriptions. During this phase, you paid 25% of drug costs until reaching $8,000 in out-of-pocket spending, at which point catastrophic coverage began eliminating coinsurance and copays for the rest of the year.
Starting in 2025, the donut hole will be replaced by a $2,000 out-of-pocket cap. Once you hit that threshold, you’ll pay nothing more for covered prescriptions for the remainder of the year offering significant financial relief for high-cost medication users.
If you’re enrolled in Medicare Parts A and B, you may face out-of-pocket costs like copays, coinsurance, and deductibles. That’s where Medigap comes in a supplemental policy designed to work alongside Original Medicare and cover these gaps. In contrast, Medicare Advantage (Part C) replaces Original Medicare with a bundled plan that may include extra benefits like dental and vision.
To purchase a Medigap policy, you must already have Parts A and B, and each spouse must buy a separate policy. Medigap plans are standardized by federal and state law, meaning benefits are consistent across insurers but pricing varies, so comparison shopping is essential.
Financial expert Patrick Traverse recommends Medigap for predictable budgeting. “Even though the premiums are higher,” he notes, “it’s much easier to plan for them than risk a large out-of-pocket expense with lesser coverage.”
Not entirely. Original Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover long-term care, routine dental or vision services, dentures, or hearing aids. To achieve more comprehensive protection, many enrollees explore Medicare Advantage (Part C) or Medigap supplemental coverage, which can help fill gaps and reduce out-of-pocket costs for services not included in traditional Medicare.
No Medicare does not cover long-term care, also known as custodial care, which includes assistance with daily activities in nursing homes, assisted living facilities, or at home. This gap in coverage is common across most health insurance plans, making it essential to explore long-term care insurance, annuities with care riders, or life settlements to prepare for future care needs.
Medicare is divided into four parts, each offering distinct healthcare benefits. Part A covers hospital stays, skilled nursing facilities, hospice care, and home health services. Part B includes outpatient care, doctor visits, medical equipment, and preventive screenings. Part D provides prescription drug coverage. Part C, or Medicare Advantage, is offered by private insurers and typically bundles Parts A, B, and D often adding extra benefits like dental, vision, and hearing care not covered by Original Medicare.
Medicare has expanded into four distinct parts A, B, C, and D each covering different healthcare needs. If you’re 65 or older and receive Social Security, you’ll be automatically enrolled in Part A, which covers hospitalization. Parts B and D (outpatient care and prescription drugs) are voluntary, though some individuals may be auto-enrolled based on eligibility. Part C (Medicare Advantage) is a private alternative that typically bundles Parts A, B, and D, often with added benefits like dental and vision coverage.