Blogs
- Open Enrollment 2023 FAQ
- Get Ready! Medicare Open Enrollment Begins October 15th
- Ten Shocking Medicare Stats
- Minimize Home Care Costs with Medicare
- 4 Ways to Make Your Home Safer for Loved Ones with Alzheimer’s Disease
- 7 Million Californians to Benefit from State-Run Retirement Plan
- 5 Ways to Get the Most from Medicare
- How to Spot Medicare Open Enrollment Scams
- 200,000 Doctors are Turning Away New Medicare Patients
- Doctors Warn Patients About Upcoming Medicare Changes
- The Mystery of Medicare
- Medicare Cost Plans vs. Medicare Advantage
- Shopping for Medicare Last Minute
- 5 Reasons to Switch Your Medicare Advantage Plan
- Medicare Help: Get Help Choosing a Hospital
- What do Medicare drug plans cover?
- How Medicare Online Works for Medicare Beneficiaries
- Medicare Part A Costs
- When to buy Medigap Insurance
- The Latest in the Battle for Prescription Drug Coverage
- Don’t Miss These Medicare Deadlines
- 4 Tips for Protecting Your Retirement Savings
- Medicare Open Enrollment Starts Soon
- The Ultimate Retirement Checklist
- Health Care to Cost $10K Per Person
- 8 Things Seniors Should Know About Hospice Care
- Do seniors know enough about their Medicare choices?
- Retirement Plans You Might Regret
- Medicare Penalized for Being Too Careful
- Paul Ryan’s Plan to Make Medicare a Voucher Program
- Thrown Away: $3 Billion in Cancer Drug Spending Wasted
- How Seniors are Winning with Home Care
- Medicare Facts - Are Injections Better Than Eye Drops for Addressing Cataracts
- 3 Things You Don’t Know About Medicare But Should
- Americans Want Medicare to Cover Obesity Treatments
- Best Places to Retire with Affordable Healthcare
- Medicare to Test New Drug Pricing for Doctors and Hospitals
- Retirement – 5 Websites Made for Retirees
- Medicare Home Health Agencies
- Medicare Part B Costs And Coverage 2016
- Medicare Advantage is Changing in 2016 – Are you Ready?
- Choosing a Home Health Agency
- Medicare Part D Costs and Coverage 2016
- DIY Guide to Medicare Shopping
- Should Medicare Cover Genetic Sequencing?
- CMS Bars Cigna from Enrolling New Medicare Members
- Is Medicare for All an Achievable Goal?
- Trump – Medicare Should Negotiate Drug Prices
- A Guide to Medicare Part A
- 5 Things You Didnt Know About Medicare
- Medicare News: A Look Back at Medicare Changes in 2015
- Hospital Prices Vary Across U.S.
- Five Ways You’re Wasting Your Retirement Money
- Government Targeting Remaining Uninsured
- Retirement Benefits Set to Change in 2015
- Medicare Costs: These 5 Screenings will Help You Keep Medicare Costs Down
- Medicare Spending: New way to explore Medicare prescription-drug spending
- Infections & Mistakes - Medicare Penalizes South Florida Hospitals
- Three Changes Coming to Medicare in 2016
- Quit Smoking with Help From Medicare
- Get Your Free Flu Shot Before It is Too Late
- Antibiotic Use: When Not to Take Antibiotics
- Medicare Premium Costs Are Not Going to Spike For Now
- A Migraine even without throbbing pain is a migraine
- Deciding on your best options according to your circumstances and needs
- Medicare Advantage Plans (Under part C)
- Medicare Prescription Drug plans (Part D)
- The things that Medicare doesn’t take care of
- Nurture your body by drinking plenty of water
- Avoid paying more for prescription drug coverage
- Dear Coffee lovers, Caffeine may actually be beneficial for you
- How does one select a primary care provider for oneself or a loved one?
- Know how traveling affects your Medicare plans
- Have Medicare costs been worrying you? The good news is, you may qualify for financial hel
- What should be done if I want to make a transition from Health Marketplace to Medicare
- The drawbacks of Medicare Advantage
- Can Medicare Advantage provide quality, savings, satisfaction and access- all together?
- Refining Medicare Advantage
- What are my expectations from a Medicare program?
- Medicare Additional/Supplemental Insurance Plans
- Working towards better American Health care- Medicare Advantage
- Managing out-of-pocket costs and paying for Medicare
- The basics of medicare and how it works
Get Best Medicare
Medicare-related plans are regulated by each state and approved for sale within geographic service areas.
In most cases, these areas are organized on a county-by-county basis; in some large urban markets, they're organized on a city or even neighborhood basis.
Fill out the form below for the list of companies offering best services in your area:
Deciding on your best options according to your circumstances and needs
The most efficient and also one of the most effective ways to go about choosing a Medicare plan is to start with a doctor or hospital that you like. Contact the business office for the provider or facility and explain that you’re about to choose a Medicare program—and ask them which they prefer and would further suggest. If they express no preference, then ask for a list of the Medicare HMO/PPO networks in which they are members. If they don’t participate in any Part C plan, you’ll need to consider using the more-expensive combination of traditional Medicare and a Supplement plan. That can be the basis of your “shopping list.”
The bottom line is, you want to find a Part C plan which includes your hospital and doctors as “network providers.” The doctors and other health care professionals, medical groups, hospitals and other health care facilities that have agreed to accept the plan’s reimbursement payments and cost sharing as payment in full are called ‘Network Providers.”
Usually, the best advice for shopping among Medicare and related plans is based on the same key points that apply while shopping for standard individual or group health insurance:
- traditional Medicare combined with a Supplement plan and Part D prescription drug coverage will cost you more each month in premiums and out-of-pocket costs but will give you more options in which doctor you see and what hospitals you use;
- a Part C plan plus Part D drug coverage will tend to cost less in premiums and out-of-pocket costs but will restrict your options in terms of the doctors and hospitals you can use;
- some Part C plans include prescription drug coverage, but it’s often a better idea to buy the drug coverage through a stand-alone Part D plan—that way, if you change your Part C coverage, your drug coverage won’t be affected.
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the better your health, the more the flexibility offered by traditional Medicare plus a simple Medicare Supplement plan will work for you;
- the worse your health, the more the cost-savings of a Part C managed-care plan become important;
Important note: You may qualify for one or more custom Medicare-related plans if you are a retiree of certain large corporations or a member (or former member) of certain labor unions. Even though these types of coverage aren’t necessarily any “better” than standard Medicare-related plans—but they may involve lower out-of-pocket costs. The important thing to keep in mind if you qualify for an employer- or union-based plan: If you transfer out of that plan and into standard Medicare-related coverage, you may not be able to transfer back.
Another note: Even if you have limited income, you may qualify for a program that assists in covering out-of-pockets expenses required by Medicare and related plans. Thankfully, there are some resources available from the federal government. Everyone who uses Medicare or most Medicare-related plans receives a copy of the booklet “Medicare & You” every year in the fall. You can download the 2015 edition of the booklet from the Medicare website (www.medicare.gov) or order a printed copy by phone at 1.800.633.4227.