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Changes to Medicare Advantage plans for 2026
I have never been a fan of advantage plans and the future makes them even more bleak. Not only hospitals not accepting Advantage plan clients, insurance companies are folding their advantage plans starting next year. If you currently have an advantage plan or are going to turn 65 in the near future, look at this video, some people might be without insurance or having an insurance plan that doesn't look like the current plan you have.
https://youtu.be/8Pq6H7UZBbU?si=0swL3qWatf2Pf6rV |
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I believe she was asking whether there will be guaranteed issue rights to a Medicare Supplemental Plan N if her Medicare Advantage plan is cancelled. This is addressed in the video (which I also found the other day) and the answer appears to be "no" or perhaps "it depends". Regarding Plan F, you can still get Plan F if you became eligible for Medicare before Jan 1, 2020. If you are on Medicare with a different lettered Supplemental plan, or are on a Medicare Advantage plan, then a switch to Plan F could require underwriting. Some insurance companies, such as AARP/UHC, allow changes among the lettered Supplemental plans without underwriting (again, with Plan F you would need to have been eligible for Medicare before Jan 1, 2020). Regardless, Plan F might be a bad deal because the difference between Plan F and Plan G is the $257 Part B deductible (included with Plan F) but the premium difference might be greater than the Part B deductible. The plans are otherwise identical. Plan N might be the most cost effective if you don't have many Dr visits each year, that might have a copay. The difference between Plan G and Plan N is the possibility of copays and excess charges (pretty rare). Otherwise, they are identical regarding coverage but Plan N will have a lower cost.
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Going Supplemental
We are going with a supplemental because United Healthcare doesn’t honor Medicare Advantage.
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Freedom Advantage Plan
So I guess the $1000.00 free golf between the two of us and the $120.00 over the counter between the two of us will be a thing of the past?
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Everybody knew when you started Medicare, if you don’t go with a supplement plan initially, you have a slim chance of converting to 1 later on in life. If you have any medical issues in the last 2 years, these supplement plans will not accept you.
So if your advantage plan goes south, or they eliminate all the freebies or raise your prices, you should go thru the supplements normal underwriting procedures to see if you qualify. Not all advantage plans are going south, so you still can get an advantage plan but probably without the freebies. Also, I’ve heard plan f participants pay more that plan g participants because there are many more plan g clients to spread out the costs. A friend my age pays over 2x more for his plan f than I pay for plan g. |
Not sure how you have all the details for Medicare plans for 2026 when the insurance brokers who deal with all the plans will not have any information until close to open enrollment. Yes there will be changes what they will be we don't yet. We don't even know what exact cost Medicare part B premium will be yes there are estimates but not the exact dollar
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United Healthcare is an insurance company that offers regular (marketplace) health insurance, Medicare supplemental insurance, and Medicare Advantage insurance. UF Health is a medical provider group that might or might not accept various insurance plans. |
Millions of new people added to the free health care rolls added over the previous 4 years has had a negative impact
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The health of EVERYONE is good for the collective. One sick person = the potential for another Typhoid Mary, or another pandemic. |
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Medicaid: Correct that low-income individuals can qualify for free or very low-cost coverage. (Keep in mind in 2027 there will no longer be Medicaid) Subsidies: Also correct that “free” coverage isn’t truly free; costs are covered by taxpayer funding. Here is what needs correction: Obamacare (ACA) ≠ Free Healthcare
Other Groups Get Free or Nearly Free Healthcare
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This video was timely for us, as my wife is in her enrollment period and now we need to rethink our original strategy. Unfortunately, because I thought we knew our choice after hours of research, I threw away all of my notes. Fortunately, a neighbor recommended SHINE, which gives free, unbiased Medicare advice at various recreation centers on an ongoing basis. We're going that route and will see if they are up to speed on this upcoming circumstance. Not scared. Concerned. Informing ourselves to move forward with as much information as possible. The unsupported (by links) evidence on this site is not going to be our primary methodology for obtaining said knowledge. |
Spoke with my Florida Blue rep yesterday about this, and I'm no longer concerned about our Medicare Advantage plans. He himself will be going on the exact same plan as ours in April when he turns 65 which I really don't think he would do if it was going away or changing significantly as people are saying here.
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If you bought your MA plan from a TV ad featuring Jimmie Walker, you might be worried.
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