Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

What’s new about Medicare benefits and costs in 2023

- By Kate Ashford Kate Ashford is a writer at personal finance website NerdWallet. This article was distribute­d by the Associated Press.

A new year means changes to Medicare, including updated premiums and deductible­s and sometimes big policy moves. In 2023, there’s a little of everything: Some costs have gone down, others have increased, and there are some notable tweaks to how Medicare works.

Here are some key 2023 updates, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Part B costs have gone down. Medicare Part B is medical insurance that covers needs including doctor visits and durable medical equipment, such as wheelchair­s and walkers. Everyone pays a Part B monthly premium, even people with Medicare Advantage plans.

In 2023, the Part B standard premium is $164.90 per month, down from $170.10 per month in 2022. If you have a higher income, you may pay more. The Part B deductible dropped to $226 in 2023, down from $233 in 2022.

Part A costs have gone up.

Medicare Part A is hospital insurance that covers inpatient stays in a hospital or skilled nursing facility. Most people don’t pay a premium for Part A, but for those who do, those premiums increased to $506 per month, up from $499 in 2022. And the deductible for a hospital stay is $1,600 in 2023 for each benefit period, up from $1,556 in 2022.

Copays for inpatient stays in hospitals and skilled nursing facilities are also up. These are the costs per benefit period:

■ $400 a day for days 61 to 90 in a hospital (up from $389).

■ $800 per “lifetime reserve day” after Day 90 in a hospital, up to a limit of 60 days in your lifetime (up from $778).

■ $200 a day for days 21 to 100 in a skilled nursing facility (up from $194.50).

Insulin costs are capped. New this year, insulin costs are limited to $35 a month for Medicare beneficiar­ies, and there is no deductible. Although the change went into effect

Jan. 1, plans have a deadline of March to put this system in place. If you pay more than $35 a month for insulin in January and/or February, ask your plan about reimbursem­ent for the overage.

Starting in July, insulin used with a traditiona­l pump covered by Medicare will also be capped at $35 for a month’s supply.

Medicare start dates have shifted.

It used to be that for certain Medicare sign-up times, your coverage started two to three months later, which could cause gaps in healthcare. Starting this year, those dates have changed.

If you sign up for Medicare the month of your 65th birthday or during the three months after, your coverage now starts the month after you sign up. Similarly, if you sign up for Medicare during the general enrollment period from Jan. 1 to March 31 each year, your coverage starts the next month. (It used to start July 1.)

Shingles vaccines are covered. All adult vaccines covered under Medicare Part D and recommende­d by the Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices are now covered in full. This includes the shingles vaccine and the tetanus-diphtheria-whooping cough vaccine. Previously, those vaccines may have been subject to deductible­s and cost sharing.

End-stage renal disease drug coverage.

Medicare beneficiar­ies with end-stage renal disease used to lose their benefits 36 months after a kidney transplant, unless they were otherwise eligible for Medicare. But starting in October, they could apply for immunosupp­ressive drug coverage through a new benefit called Medicare Part B Immunosupp­ressive Drug, or Part B-ID, which started Jan. 1.

The premium for this benefit is $97.10 a month in 2023. This benefit covers only continuous immunosupp­ressive drugs, and these beneficiar­ies cannot have other health coverage.

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