Medicare Advantage shopping season arrives with a dose of confusion and some political implications
Thinner benefits and coverage changes await many older Americans shopping for health insurance this fall. That’s if their plan is even still available in 2025.
More than a million people will probably have to find new coverage as major insurers cut costs and pull back from markets for Medicare Advantage plans, the privately run version of the federal government’s coverage program mostly for people ages 65 and older.
Industry experts also predict some price increases for Medicare prescription drug plans as required coverage improvements kick in.
Voters will learn about the insurance changes just weeks before they pick the next president and as Democrat
“This could be bad news for Vice President Harris. If that premium is going up, that’s a very obvious sign that you’re paying more," said
Insurance agents say the distraction of the election adds another complication to an already challenging annual enrollment window that starts next month.
Insurers are pulling back from Medicare Advantage
Medicare Advantage plans will cover more than 35 million people next year, or around half of all people enrolled in Medicare, according to the federal government. Insurance agents say they expect more people than usual will have to find new coverage for 2025 because their insurer has either ended a plan or left their market.
The health insurer Humana expects more than half a million customers — about 10% of its total — to be affected as it pulls Medicare Advantage plans from places around the country. Many customers will be able to transfer to other Humana plans, but company leaders still anticipate losing a few hundred thousand customers.
CVS Health’s
Insurers say rising costs and care use, along with reimbursement cuts from the government, are forcing them to pull back.
Some people can expect a tough search
When insurers leave Medicare Advantage markets, they tend to stop selling plans that have lower quality ratings and those with a higher proportion of Black buyers, said Dr.
He noted that market exits can be particularly hard on people with several doctors and on patients with cognitive trouble like dementia.
Most markets will still have dozens of plan choices. But finding a new option involves understanding out-of-pocket costs for each choice, plus figuring out how physicians and regular prescriptions are covered.
“People don’t like change when it comes to health insurance because you don’t know what’s on the other side of the fence,” said
Plans that don’t leave markets may raise deductibles and trim perks like cards used to pay for utilities or food.
Those proved popular in recent years as inflation rose, said
“It’s really difficult for a person on a fixed income to choose a health plan for the right reasons … when
Don't “sleep” on picking a Medicare plan
Prices also could rise for some so-called standalone Part D prescription drug plans, which people pair with traditional Medicare coverage. KFF says that population includes more than 13 million people.
The
But brokers and agents say premiums can vary widely, and they still expect some increases. They also expect fewer plan choices and changes to formularies, or lists of covered drugs. Roberts said she has already seen premium hikes of
Any price shift will hit a customer base known to switch plans for premium changes as small as
The changes come as a congressional-approved coverage overhaul takes hold. Most notably, out-of-pocket drug costs will be capped at
In the long run, these changes will lead to a “much richer benefit,” Whorley said.
KFF's Neuman noted that the cap on drug costs will be especially helpful to cancer patients and others with expensive prescriptions. She estimates about 1.5 million people will benefit.
To ward off big premium spikes because of the changes, the Biden administration will pull billions of dollars from the Medicare trust fund to pay insurers to keep premium prices down, a move some
People will be able to sign up for 2025 coverage
“This is not a year to sleep on it, just re-enroll in the status quo,” said Whorley, the health care analyst.
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