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Understanding Medicare: Parts A, B, C, D, and the Gaps Nobody Warns You About

By the PolicyZen Team · Updated March 2026 · 12 min read

Medicare is federal health insurance for people 65 and older, and for certain younger people with disabilities or end-stage renal disease. Over 67 million Americans are enrolled. And a remarkable number of them — including people who have been on it for years — don't fully understand what it covers, what it doesn't, and what happens if they miss an enrollment deadline.

The program is split into four parts with overlapping purposes, supplemented by a separate layer of private plans, all governed by enrollment rules with permanent financial penalties for getting them wrong. Here's how it actually works.

The Four Parts of Medicare

Part A

Hospital Insurance

What it covers: Inpatient hospital care, skilled nursing facility care (after a qualifying hospital stay), some home health care, hospice care.

What it costs: Most people pay $0 premium for Part A if they or their spouse worked and paid Medicare taxes for at least 10 years (40 quarters). You still pay deductibles and coinsurance — the Part A deductible for 2025 is $1,632 per benefit period (not per year — per hospital stay or illness episode).

Key limitation: Part A does not cover long-term custodial care — help with daily activities like bathing or dressing. That's not covered by Medicare at all.

Part B

Medical Insurance

What it covers: Doctor visits, outpatient care, preventive services, lab tests, X-rays, durable medical equipment (wheelchairs, walkers), mental health services, some home health care.

What it costs: The standard 2025 monthly premium is $185/month, deducted from Social Security if you receive it. Higher earners pay more (IRMAA surcharges apply above $106,000 individual / $212,000 joint income). Annual deductible: $257. After deductible, Medicare pays 80% of approved amounts; you pay 20% — with no out-of-pocket maximum.

Key limitation: That 20% coinsurance with no cap can be catastrophic for serious illness. A $500,000 hospital bill means $100,000 owed — unless you have supplemental coverage.

Part C

Medicare Advantage

What it is: Private insurance plans (from companies like Humana, UnitedHealth, Aetna) that provide all of your Part A and Part B benefits — and usually Part D — bundled together. You must still be enrolled in Medicare Parts A and B.

What it typically adds: Most Advantage plans include prescription drug coverage, and many add dental, vision, hearing, and wellness benefits that Original Medicare doesn't cover.

The tradeoff: Lower premiums (many plans are $0/month above your Part B premium) but restricted networks. You typically must use in-network providers. Prior authorization is common and frequently contested. If you need care from a specialist or out-of-network provider, Advantage plans can create real barriers.

Part D

Prescription Drug Coverage

What it covers: Prescription drugs. Each Part D plan has a formulary — a list of covered drugs — organized into tiers with different cost-sharing at each tier.

What it costs: Varies by plan; average about $46/month in 2025. Higher earners pay IRMAA surcharges here too. Plans have deductibles, copays, and coinsurance that vary significantly.

Important change (2025): The Inflation Reduction Act capped Medicare Part D out-of-pocket drug costs at $2,000/year starting in 2025, eliminating the old "catastrophic" spending spiral that left some seniors paying thousands per year for medications.

Original Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage: The Real Choice

When you enroll in Medicare, you face a fundamental choice: stay on Original Medicare (Parts A + B, with optional Part D) or switch to a Medicare Advantage plan. This decision shapes your entire healthcare experience.

Original Medicare + MedigapMedicare Advantage
NetworkAny provider that accepts Medicare — nationwideNetwork-restricted (HMO or PPO); must use in-network for lowest cost
Out-of-pocket maxNo cap on Original Medicare; Medigap fills the gapCapped by law (up to ~$8,850 in-network for 2025)
Monthly costPart B premium + Medigap premium (can be $150–$300/mo)Often $0–$50 above Part B premium
Prior authorizationRareCommon; frequently creates delays or denials
Dental/vision/hearingNot covered; need separate plansOften bundled
Best forPeople who travel frequently, have complex health needs, or want maximum provider choiceGenerally healthy people who want low premiums and extra benefits

Medigap: Filling the Holes in Original Medicare

Original Medicare leaves significant gaps — most importantly, the unlimited 20% coinsurance on Part B charges. Medigap (also called Medicare Supplement) policies are private insurance plans that fill these gaps. There are standardized plan types (Plan G, Plan N, Plan F, etc.) with identical benefits from any insurer — the only difference is price and customer service.

Plan G is currently the most popular for new enrollees. It covers Part A deductibles, Part B coinsurance (the 20%), hospital stays beyond Medicare limits, and skilled nursing facility coinsurance. You pay only the Part B annual deductible out of pocket — after that, Plan G covers almost everything else.

The Medigap enrollment window matters enormously. During your Medigap Open Enrollment Period (the 6 months starting when you turn 65 and enroll in Part B), insurers cannot deny you coverage or charge you more due to health conditions. After this window closes, they can — and many people with significant health histories find they can't get Medigap at any price, or only at very high premiums.

The Enrollment Penalties Nobody Tells You About

Medicare has some of the harshest late enrollment penalties in insurance. They're permanent — they follow you for life.

Part B late enrollment penalty: If you don't enroll in Part B when first eligible (and don't have qualifying employer coverage that allows delay), your premium increases by 10% for each 12-month period you were eligible but not enrolled. Delay 3 years: pay 30% more — forever.

Part D late enrollment penalty: 1% of the national base beneficiary premium for each month without creditable prescription drug coverage. Also permanent.

There are valid reasons to delay — primarily if you have employer-sponsored insurance from an active employer. "Active employer" matters: COBRA and retiree coverage don't count as delaying reasons. If you're working past 65 with employer health coverage, coordinate carefully with HR before deciding when to enroll in Medicare.

What Medicare Doesn't Cover (The Biggest Gaps)

Medicare vs. Medicaid: The Confusion

These are two completely different programs. People confuse them constantly.

Some people qualify for both — called "dual eligibles." Medicaid can pay Medicare premiums, deductibles, and coinsurance for qualifying low-income Medicare beneficiaries, and it covers long-term care that Medicare doesn't.

Frequently Asked Questions

When exactly do I enroll in Medicare?
Your Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) is the 7-month window centered on your 65th birthday: the 3 months before, the month of, and the 3 months after. If you enroll during the first 3 months, coverage starts the first day of your birthday month. If you enroll in the month of or after your birthday, coverage is delayed by 1–3 months. Missing your IEP without qualifying employer coverage starts the late enrollment penalty clock.
I'm still working at 65 with employer health insurance. Do I need to enroll in Medicare?
It depends on employer size. If your employer has 20+ employees, your employer insurance is primary — you can delay Part B without penalty until you leave employment or lose the employer coverage. You then have an 8-month Special Enrollment Period to sign up without penalty. If your employer has fewer than 20 employees, Medicare is primary — you should enroll in Parts A and B at 65 or face gaps and potential penalties. Always confirm with your HR department and consider talking to a Medicare counselor before making this decision.
Can I switch from Medicare Advantage back to Original Medicare?
Yes, during the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15–December 7) or the Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (January 1–March 31). However, if you want to add Medigap coverage after switching back, you'll likely face medical underwriting — insurers can charge more or deny coverage based on your health history after your initial Medigap enrollment window has passed. This is one reason the Original Medicare + Medigap combination is often recommended for people who can afford the higher premiums: it preserves flexibility.
What does Medicare Advantage prior authorization actually mean in practice?
It means your plan can require pre-approval before you receive certain services, procedures, or medications. If authorization is denied, you may need to appeal before receiving the care. A 2022 HHS Office of Inspector General report found that Medicare Advantage plans denied 13% of prior authorization requests for services that would have been covered under Original Medicare — and 75% of appeals of denied requests were overturned in the patient's favor, suggesting many initial denials were inappropriate. Prior authorization is a real and meaningful difference between Advantage plans and Original Medicare.

Know What Your Medicare Plan Actually Covers

Upload your Medicare Supplement, Medicare Advantage, or Part D plan documents to PolicyZen. Ask about your deductibles, out-of-pocket limits, covered services — get real answers from your actual plan documents.

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Related Guides

→ Medigap Plans: Plan G vs. N → Medicare Advantage vs. Original Medicare → Medicare Part D 2026 Changes → IRMAA Medicare Surcharges