Chattanooga Times Free Press

What is Medicare’s ‘creditable’ prescripti­on drug coverage?

- Toni King

Hello Toni,

I turned 65 in August the year before last, continued to work full-time with an HSA that has a $3,000 deductible for medical claims paid by the insurance plan, and used a prescripti­on discount card to cover medication­s. My employer’s human resources manager advised me to enroll in Medicare Part A when I turned 65. Because I received incorrect informatio­n, I could not fund my HSA from that time.

I decided to delay enrolling in Part B until I retired and enrolled in a Medicare Supplement Plan G and a Part D prescripti­on drug plan with a Jan. 1 start date.

I just received a notice from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services saying they do not have a record of me having prescripti­on drug coverage that “met Medicare’s minimum standards” from the month I turned 65 through December, and I may receive a Part D late enrollment penalty. What does this mean?

— Claude Claude,

I do not have good news for you. You have a Medicare Part D prescripti­on drug penalty problem.

The Medicare & You handbook states: Creditable prescripti­on drug coverage could include drug coverage from a current or former employer or union, TRICARE, Indian Health Service, the Department of Veterans Affairs or individual health insurance coverage. If you go 63 days or more in a row without Medicare drug coverage or other creditable prescripti­on drug coverage, you may have to pay a penalty if you sign up for Medicare drug coverage later. So Americans with “creditable” coverage can apply for a Medicare Part D plan at a later date without paying a penalty. (Chapter 5 of the Medicare Survival Guide Advanced edition explains Medicare Part D and how to avoid Part D penalties).

Unfortunat­ely, prescripti­on discount programs — such as GoodRx or store prescripti­on membership­s — are not considered “creditable” coverage.

There is a further complicati­on to getting Part D coverage: Many Americans who retire after age 65 with employer benefits will know to file the “Request for Employment Informatio­n” form with Social Security to avoid the infamous Medicare Part B penalty. But they may be surprised to learn the form does not tell Medicare if you had “creditable” prescripti­on drug coverage.

Medicare calculates the Part D penalty by multiplyin­g 1% of the national base beneficiar­y premium ($32.74 in 2023) by the number of full, uncovered months that you didn’t have either Part D or creditable coverage, and rounding to the nearest 10 cents. That amount is added to your monthly Part D premium.

Your late enrollment period does not begin from the day you lose or leave your company health plan, but from the month that your Medicare Part A started. So your 17 months without creditable coverage will cost you an extra $5.60 per month for 2023. (The national base amount can change each year, so your penalty may also change.)

The late enrollment period penalty can be applied if:

› You waited more than 63 days without creditable prescripti­on drug coverage when leaving company benefits, and you are older than 65 years old and 90 days.

› Your prescripti­on drug benefit (not health benefits) is not “creditable” as Medicare defines it.

› You never enrolled in Medicare Part D when first eligible.

The lesson is: If you are age 65 with full-time benefits (either from yourself or your spouse), your plan must tell you each year if your drug coverage is “creditable.” If you do not receive this notice by September, contact your employer’s HR department to request it.

Toni King is an author and columnist on Medicare and health insurance issues. She spent more than 27 years as a top sales leader in the field. For a Medicare checkup, email info@tonisays.com or call 832-519-8664. You can visit seniorreso­urce. com/medicare-moments to listen to her Medicare Moments podcasts and get other informatio­n for seniors.

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