Updated 2026-05-12 · Wingman Protocol

Medicare Explained: Parts A, B, C, D and When to Enroll

Medicare feels simple until you realize it is really a collection of coverage buckets, private-plan choices, enrollment deadlines, and income-based surcharges. Many people first meet the system when they are also retiring, evaluating employer coverage, or winding down HSA contributions, so the stakes are high. A missed deadline can create lifelong penalties, while the wrong plan structure can leave a gap in prescriptions, specialist access, or out-of-pocket protection.

This guide explains the major pieces in plain English and uses 2025 cost figures where broad national numbers are available. Plan premiums, provider networks, and drug formularies vary by ZIP code, insurer, and income, so treat this as general education and verify current details before enrolling.

What Medicare is and what it does not automatically cover

Original Medicare is made up of Part A and Part B, but that does not mean it covers every medical cost with no choices left to make. Part A mainly covers hospital-type care, and Part B mainly covers outpatient medical services. Original Medicare generally does not include routine long-term custodial care, most dental, most vision, and standard prescription drug coverage. That is why people often add either a Part D plan plus a Medigap policy, or choose a Medicare Advantage plan that packages coverage differently.

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The first useful mindset shift is to stop asking which single Medicare plan is best and start asking which structure fits your doctors, medications, travel habits, budget, and risk tolerance. Someone who values broad provider access may prefer Original Medicare plus Medigap and Part D. Someone who prioritizes lower upfront premiums and bundled extras may prefer Medicare Advantage. The right answer is personal and local.

Part A and Part B are the foundation

Medicare Part A helps cover inpatient hospital stays, skilled nursing facility care after a qualifying stay, some home health services, and hospice. Many people get Part A premium-free because they or a spouse paid Medicare taxes long enough during working years. Even when the premium is zero, Part A is not free health care. In 2025, the inpatient hospital deductible is $1,676 per benefit period, and coinsurance can apply for longer stays.

Part B covers doctor visits, outpatient care, preventive services, durable medical equipment, and many common medical needs outside the hospital. In 2025, the standard Part B premium is $185 per month and the annual deductible is $257, with higher-income enrollees paying more because of IRMAA. Many people think Part B is optional because Part A may be premium-free, but delaying Part B without valid creditable coverage can create a late-enrollment penalty that lasts for life.

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Part C means Medicare Advantage, not an extra layer on top of everything

Part C, also called Medicare Advantage, is an alternative way to receive Medicare benefits through a private insurer approved by Medicare. These plans must cover at least what Original Medicare covers, but they often use provider networks, prior authorization, and plan-specific cost-sharing rules. Many plans also bundle prescription drug coverage and extras such as dental, vision, or fitness benefits. The tradeoff is that lower premiums do not automatically mean lower total cost if your network is narrow or your out-of-pocket exposure is high.

A key rule many people miss is that Medigap generally does not pair with Medicare Advantage. You are usually choosing one structure or the other: Original Medicare with optional supplement and drug coverage, or a Medicare Advantage plan with its own network and cost design. That decision can be hard to reverse later because guaranteed-issue rights for Medigap are limited outside certain windows and circumstances.

Part D and Medigap solve different problems

Part D covers outpatient prescription drugs through private plans. Premiums, formularies, preferred pharmacies, and copays vary widely, which is why it is important to check your actual medications every year during open enrollment. In 2025, the standard Part D deductible can be as high as $590, though many plans use a lower deductible or waive it for preferred tiers. Higher-income beneficiaries may also owe a separate Part D IRMAA surcharge in addition to the plan premium.

Medigap, also called Medicare Supplement insurance, helps pay some of the deductibles, coinsurance, and copays left by Original Medicare. It does not replace Part D and generally does not include drug coverage. Its main value is predictability and broad provider access, since Original Medicare is accepted by a large share of providers nationwide. If you travel often or dislike referral-based networks, that predictability can be worth more than the lowest advertised premium.

Enrollment periods and late penalties are where expensive mistakes happen

Your Initial Enrollment Period generally starts three months before the month you turn 65, includes your birthday month, and continues for three months after. If you miss that window and do not have a qualifying reason to delay, the General Enrollment Period runs from January 1 through March 31 each year, with coverage starting later. There are also Special Enrollment Periods for certain employer-coverage and life-event situations, but the rules depend on the specific facts.

Late penalties are a major reason to learn the calendar early. Part B typically adds a permanent penalty for each full 12-month period you could have had Part B but did not enroll. Part D can also impose a lasting penalty if you go without creditable prescription coverage for too long. Penalties are not the only risk; delayed enrollment can also mean delayed access to care or a rushed plan choice under pressure.

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Medicare versus employer insurance and the HSA interaction

If you are still working at 65, the best move depends on the size of the employer and whether the coverage is considered creditable for Medicare purposes. For many people with large-employer coverage, delaying Part B may be reasonable while they keep the group plan. For people with small-employer coverage, COBRA, retiree coverage, or marketplace insurance, the answer can be different. This is one place where calling the benefits department and asking direct Medicare coordination questions is worth the time.

HSAs add another layer. Once you are enrolled in any part of Medicare, you can no longer make or receive HSA contributions. If you sign up for Medicare after age 65, Part A can sometimes be retroactive for up to six months, which means many people stop HSA contributions several months before their Medicare start date to avoid excess contributions. You can still spend existing HSA money on qualified medical expenses after Medicare begins; the rule change is about contributions, not about using the balance.

Comparison table: the major Medicare parts and 2025 cost checkpoints

Putting the core pieces side by side makes it easier to see what each one is designed to do.

CoverageWhat it mainly covers2025 national cost checkpointPlanning note
Part AHospital and inpatient-related careOften $0 premium; $1,676 deductible per benefit periodMany people qualify premium-free but still face cost sharing
Part BDoctors, outpatient care, preventive servicesStandard premium $185/month; deductible $257IRMAA can raise the premium for higher-income households
Part CPrivate Medicare Advantage alternativePremiums vary by plan and countyCheck networks, prior authorization, and max out-of-pocket
Part DOutpatient prescription drugsPlan premium varies; deductible can be up to $590Drug formularies and pharmacies change by plan
MedigapSupplement for Original Medicare cost sharingPremium varies by age, area, and insurerGenerally pairs with Original Medicare, not Advantage

IRMAA is based on modified adjusted gross income from two years earlier, so a large Roth conversion, property sale, or bonus can raise future Medicare costs even if your income later falls. If that happens, Medicare may let you request a new determination after certain life-changing events.

Because plan options change annually, the best Medicare decision is usually a yearly review rather than a one-time choice you forget. Even people who love their current plan should verify that doctors, pharmacies, and medications still price the way they expect.

One more practical tip: write down your current prescriptions, preferred pharmacy, primary doctors, and travel patterns before you compare plans. That short list will usually reveal whether a lower-premium option is really a fit or whether it only looks cheap until you use it. It also makes annual reviews much faster.

Plan past enrollment day

Use the guide to think beyond Medicare basics and evaluate how you would handle long-term care costs that Medicare generally does not cover in full.

Long-Term Care Insurance Buyer's Guide

Affiliate & resource block

Educational links below may include non-affiliate government resources and, where noted, commercial comparison pages. Always verify current terms directly with the source.

Frequently asked questions

Is Medicare free at 65?
Not entirely. Many people get premium-free Part A, but Part B usually has a monthly premium and deductible, and other parts can add more costs.
What is the difference between Part B and Part D?
Part B covers medical services such as doctor visits and outpatient care. Part D covers outpatient prescription drugs through private plans.
Can I have Medigap with Medicare Advantage?
Generally no. Medigap is designed to supplement Original Medicare, not Medicare Advantage plans.
What happens if I miss my enrollment window?
You may have to wait for a later enrollment period and could face lifelong late penalties, especially for Part B and Part D.
Does COBRA count as employer coverage for delaying Part B?
Not in the same way active employer coverage does. Many people need to enroll in Part B rather than rely on COBRA alone, so verify the rule for your situation.
Can I keep contributing to an HSA after Medicare starts?
No. Once Medicare coverage begins, new HSA contributions generally must stop, although you can still spend the existing HSA balance.
What is IRMAA?
It is an income-related surcharge that can increase Part B and Part D costs for higher-income beneficiaries based on prior-year tax information.
Should I choose Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage?
It depends on your doctors, prescriptions, travel habits, risk tolerance, and local plan options. Compare total cost, network access, and flexibility before choosing.

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