Houston Chronicle Sunday

MEDICARE PART B

2023 premiums dip, bucking inflation trends

- This article was first published on NerdWallet.com.

While inf lation is pushing up prices for almost everything else, Medicare is about to be less expensive. Medicare Part B premiums will go down for 2023, according to a (recent) announceme­nt by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS.

The monthly premium for Medicare Part B will fall to $164.90 in 2023 for most beneficiar­ies. (A small number of beneficiar­ies with higher incomes pay higher premiums). That’s a decrease of $5.20 per month from the $170.10 premium in 2022.

The Medicare Part B deductible is going down, too, from $233 in 2022 to $226 in 2023.

The premium decrease applies to nearly everyone with Medicare because both Original Medicare (Part A and Part B) beneficiar­ies and Medicare Advantage (Part C) members pay the Part B premium.

Why did prices drop for 2023?

The lower premiums for 2023 come just one year after a major price increase. Premiums went up by $21.60 from 2021 to 2022 — the largest-ever price increase for Medicare Part B premiums.

A single drug is a major factor in both the 2022 price increase and the 2023 price drop: Aduhelm, a very costly treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.

In a November 2021 fact sheet, CMS cited potential Medicare coverage for Aduhelm as one reason for the large

Part B price increase for 2022. Even though CMS hadn’t yet determined whether Medicare would cover Aduhelm, CMS said that “we must plan for the possibilit­y of coverage for this high cost Alzheimer’s drug

which could, if covered, result in significan­tly higher expenditur­es for the Medicare program.”

That possibilit­y didn’t come to pass.

In April 2022, CMS announced that Medicare would cover Aduhelm only in the context of certain government-approved clinical trials. As a result, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra announced in May that “we have determined that we can put cost-savings directly back into the pockets of people enrolled in Medicare in 2023.”

What this means for Medicare beneficiar­ies

2023 will be only the fourth time Medicare Part B premiums have gone down year over year, according to a NerdWallet analysis of historical Medicare premium data. More than a decade has passed since the last decrease in 2012. The Medicare Part B premium for 2023 is about 3% lower than 2022 — a smaller percentage than past decreases.

However, Social Security payments might grow by nearly 9% following the 2023 cost-of-living adjustment, according to analysis by The Senior Citizens League, a nonprofit advocacy group. Medicare Part B premiums, which are often deducted from Social Security, won’t eat up any of that increase because they will be lower, leaving beneficiar­ies with more money to cover other costs that have risen as a result of inf lation.

Alex Rosenberg writes for NerdWallet.

Email: arosenberg@nerdwallet.com.

Twitter: @AlexPRosen­berg.

The article Medicare Part B 2023 Premiums Dip, Bucking Inflation Trends originally appeared on NerdWallet.

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