Medicare Advantage Premiums Expected to Drop in 2021

Medicare Advantage Premiums Expected to Drop in 2021


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Monthly premiums for Medicare Advantage (MA) plans continue to decline, with charges expected to go from an average of $23.63 this year to $21 in 2021, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid


Services (CMS) announced on Thursday. Federal officials also expect enrollment in these private insurance plans to grow by 2.5 million beneficiaries to a record-high 27 million.


Medicare beneficiaries will be able to review their coverage during the open enrollment period that runs from Oct. 15 to Dec. 7. Any changes enrollees make in their plans will take effect in


January.


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Premiums and deductibles for original Medicare's Part A (which covers hospital care) and Part B (which helps pay for doctor visits and other outpatient services) are expected to be released


next month. Monthly premiums for the Part D prescription drug plans are expected to increase, on average, by 68 cents (2.3 percent).


Medicare Advantage, also known as Medicare Part C, is a private insurance alternative to original Medicare. Part D plans are also commercial plans. MA plans cover all the medical services


that parts A and B do, and most also cover prescription drugs. The federal government also allows MA plans to offer dental, vision, hearing and other services that original Medicare does


not.

More Medicare beneficiaries turn to Advantage plans


"We're seeing that more of our beneficiaries are coming to Medicare Advantage,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said in a call with reporters previewing the MA rates for 2021. Verma said


changes to Medicare regulations that give MA plans greater flexibility to structure coverage have “created more competition, and with more competition we have greater choice and lower


costs."


The premiums announced Thursday, as well as the Part D expected monthly charges, represent national averages. The actual premiums beneficiaries will pay depend on the plans they select and


where they live. When an enrollee chooses an MA plan, he or she will still be responsible for the government-set Part B monthly premium — $144.60 in 2020.


One issue that often keeps original Medicare enrollees from joining MA plans is that these plans are structured around networks of physicians and hospitals. That limits the providers


beneficiaries can see without incurring higher out-of-pocket costs. In addition, those beneficiaries who don't live in one place throughout the year or travel often find themselves having to


use out-of-network doctors, which either aren't covered by MA plans or charge patients more.


Verma suggested that the increased availability of telehealth services for Medicare recipients may alleviate some of the concerns for beneficiaries who travel. “One of the things we've done


is allow for greater flexibility around telehealth benefits, and I think that's very critical as patients are moving around,” Verma said.


The number of MA plans available to beneficiaries continues to increase. The average number of MA plans per county will increase from about 39 plans in 2020 to 47 in 2021, CMS says. There


will also be an 18 percent increase in plans available in rural counties. CMS expects 42 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries to choose MA plans for 2021.

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Dena Bunis covers Medicare, health care, health policy and Congress. She also writes the “Medicare Made Easy” column for the AARP Bulletin. An award-winning journalist, Bunis spent decades


working for metropolitan daily newspapers, including as Washington bureau chief for the Orange County Register and as a health policy and workplace writer for Newsday.


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