Medicare Open Enrollment 2020-2021

Medicare Open Enrollment is Oct 15 to Dec 7

For 2021 healthcare coverage, Medicare’s annual Open Enrollment period runs from October 15 to December 7, 2020.

During Medicare Open Enrollment, seniors can:

  • Switch from Original Medicare to a Medicare Advantage plan
  • Change from Medicare Advantage to Original Medicare
  • Select a different Medicare Advantage plan
  • Choose a different Medicare prescription drug plan

Why do seniors need to make changes to their Medicare plans?

Medicare health and drug plans can change each year: costs, coverage, and which providers and pharmacies are in-network. 

That means the plan that covered everything your older adult needed this year might not have the same coverage next year. 

This is especially true for Part D prescription drug plans.

When the plans change, this could result in significant increases in next year’s healthcare costs. 

But often, changing to a different plan could get the coverage your older adult needs without increasing their premium or out-of-pocket costs.

And, there’s always the chance that a plan with a lower premium could provide the coverage they need.

 

The Annual Notice of Change letter highlights important changes

To find out what’s changing in your older adult’s current Medicare plans, look for the Annual Notice of Change (ANOC) letter.

The ANOC is a helpful summary that highlights any changes in coverage, costs, or service area that will be effective in January 2021.

Medicare plans send their ANOC letters in early October and Medicare Advantage plans typically send theirs in September.

 

Compare 4 important areas of Medicare coverage

1. Premiums
Is the plan premium going up? If the increase is significant, there might be a plan that gives similar coverage at a lower price.

2. Deductibles and co-pays
What are the current deductibles and co-pays? Will these be increasing next year?

3. Prescription drug coverage
Medication that’s not covered is expensive. Paying special attention to prescription drug plans could save a lot of money.

It’s time-consuming, but necessary to find out how changes in drug plan premiums, formulary, and pricing tiers will affect the cost of medications your older adult takes.

Typically, a plan could raise premiums, add or remove drugs from their formulary, change pricing, or move drugs from one price tier to another.

Look up each of your older adult’s medications so you’ll know:

  1. If it’s covered in the plan’s formulary
  2. Which pricing tier the medication is in
  3. How much the drugs in that tier will cost

It’s also important to know if your older adult’s preferred pharmacy is in the plan’s network (prices are lowest in-network) and if there are any restrictions, like prior authorization or being forced to try a certain drug first.

Estimating those costs and taking restrictions into account gives you a clear picture of which 2019 plan will provide the most cost-effective prescription drug coverage.

Note: A plan’s formulary is the list of covered medications. Most prescription drug plans have 5 pricing tiers – preferred generics, other generics, preferred branded drugs, other branded drugs, and expensive specialty medications. Each tier has a different cost.

4. Part C / Medicare Advantage / Managed Care
If your older adult has a Medicare Advantage plan, call their current doctors, hospitals, specialists, and other providers to make sure they’ll still be in the plan’s provider network in 2019.

Changes made during Open Enrollment will take effect on January 1, 2021. And after December 7th, no further changes to Medicare coverage can be made for 2021.

We explain why reviewing and making changes to your older adult’s medical and prescription plans can help them save money and improve next year’s coverage.

We also share how to know which plan changes to focus on, how to compare 4 key areas of coverage, and 4 ways to get help with Medicare decisions.