Updated November 2025 — 2026 Official Figures

2026 Medicare & Social Security
Complete Reference Numbers

Every official cost, premium, deductible, IRMAA bracket, and Social Security figure for 2026 – sourced directly from CMS and SSA. Updated each November. Free consultation available year-round.

01

Medicare Part A – Hospital Insurance

CMS.gov 2026

Premium – 40+ Quarters
$0 / mo
Free for most people. Requires 40+ quarters (10+ years) of Medicare-taxed work for you or your spouse.
Premium – 30-39 Quarters
$311 / mo
If you or your spouse have 30-39 quarters of Medicare-covered work history.
Premium – Under 30 Quarters
$565 / mo
Fewer than 30 quarters. You must also enroll in Part B to purchase Part A.
Hospital Inpatient Costs Per Benefit Period (2026)
Duration of Stay What You Pay Notes
Days 1-60 $1,676 deductible One deductible per benefit period, then $0
Days 61-90 $419 / day Daily coinsurance
Days 91-150 (Lifetime Reserve) $838 / day 60 lifetime reserve days total – once used, cannot be replaced
Beyond 150 days 100% of all costs No Part A coverage; Medigap Plan G/N covers days 1-150
Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Costs Per Benefit Period (2026)
Duration of Stay What You Pay Notes
Days 1-20 $0 Fully covered after a qualifying 3-day inpatient hospital stay
Days 21-100 $209.50 / day Medigap Plan G and N cover this in full
Beyond 100 days 100% of all costs No Part A SNF coverage beyond day 100

Observation Status Warning: SNF coverage requires a prior inpatient stay of at least 3 consecutive days. Observation status does NOT count even if you sleep in the hospital overnight. Always ask your doctor: “Am I admitted as inpatient or under observation?”

Benefit Period Rule: A new benefit period – and a new $1,676 deductible – begins each time you have been out of hospital and SNF for 60 consecutive days. You could owe this deductible more than once in a single year.

02

Medicare Part B – Medical Insurance

CMS.gov 2026

Standard Monthly Premium
$202.90
For individuals with 2024 MAGI of $109,000 or less; joint filers $218,000 or less.
Annual Deductible
$283
You pay the first $283 of Part B-covered services each calendar year before Medicare pays its share.
Coinsurance After Deductible
20%
Medicare pays 80% of approved amounts. No annual cap under Original Medicare alone.

No out-of-pocket maximum under Original Medicare alone. Without Medigap or Medicare Advantage, your 20% coinsurance is unlimited. A serious illness could cost tens of thousands out of pocket. This is why Medigap Plan G and N are so valuable.
Part B Coverage Summary
Service Your Cost (After Deductible)
Doctor visits and specialist consultations 20% coinsurance
Outpatient hospital services and surgeries 20% coinsurance
Diagnostic tests, lab work, and X-rays 20% coinsurance
Durable medical equipment (wheelchairs, walkers) 20% coinsurance
Mental health services (outpatient) 20% coinsurance
Ambulance services 20% coinsurance
Annual Wellness Visit $0 (if provider accepts Medicare assignment)
Most USPSTF-recommended preventive screenings $0
Flu, pneumonia, and COVID-19 vaccines (Part B) $0

Part B does NOT cover: routine dental, routine vision (glasses, contacts), hearing aids or fittings, long-term custodial care, cosmetic procedures, or most care outside the United States.

03

IRMAA – Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount

Based on 2024 tax return MAGI

How IRMAA works: If your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) from 2 years ago (2024 for 2026 premiums) exceeds the thresholds below, you pay higher Part B and Part D premiums. If your income has dropped due to retirement, divorce, death of a spouse, or other qualifying event, appeal using Form SSA-44.

Married Filing Separately: If you lived with your spouse at any time during the year but filed separate returns, the highest IRMAA surcharge tiers begin at just $109,000 of individual income – one of the most punishing provisions in Medicare’s premium rules.
Part B Premium – Individual Filers (2026)
2024 Individual MAGI Monthly Part B Premium
$109,000 or less $202.90
$109,001 – $137,000 $284.10
$137,001 – $171,000 $405.80
$171,001 – $205,000 $527.50
$205,001 – $500,000 $649.20
Above $500,000 $689.90
Part B Premium – Joint Filers (2026)
2024 Joint MAGI Monthly Part B Premium
$218,000 or less $202.90
$218,001 – $274,000 $284.10
$274,001 – $342,000 $405.80
$342,001 – $410,000 $527.50
$410,001 – $750,000 $649.20
Above $750,000 $689.90
Combined Part B + Part D IRMAA (2026)
Individual MAGI (2024) Joint MAGI (2024) Part B Premium Part D IRMAA / mo Total B + D surcharge
$109,000 or less $218,000 or less $202.90 $0 $202.90
$109,001 – $137,000 $218,001 – $274,000 $284.10 +$14.50 $298.60
$137,001 – $171,000 $274,001 – $342,000 $405.80 +$37.50 $443.30
$171,001 – $205,000 $342,001 – $410,000 $527.50 +$60.40 $587.90
$205,001 – $500,000 $410,001 – $750,000 $649.20 +$83.30 $732.50
Above $500,000 Above $750,000 $689.90 +$91.00 $780.90
What Counts as Income for IRMAA (MAGI)
Income Type Included in MAGI?
Wages, salary, self-employment income Yes
Capital gains (short- and long-term) Yes
Traditional IRA withdrawals and Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) Yes
Pension and annuity income Yes
Taxable portion of Social Security benefits Yes
Tax-exempt interest (e.g., municipal bonds) Yes – included in MAGI
Roth IRA withdrawals (qualified distributions) No
Reverse mortgage proceeds No
Roth IRA conversions Yes – full converted amount is income
Home sale gains above $250K/$500K exclusion Yes – can spike IRMAA 2 years later

How to Appeal IRMAA: If your income dropped due to a qualifying life-changing event (retirement, divorce, death of spouse, loss of income-producing property), submit Form SSA-44 to SSA with documentation. SSA will use a more recent tax year to recalculate. Do not simply pay the surcharge if your income has since decreased.

04

Medicare Part D – Prescription Drug Coverage

Inflation Reduction Act fully in effect 2025-2026

Annual Out-of-Pocket Cap
$2,100
Once you spend $2,100 on covered drugs, you pay $0 for the rest of the year. No cap existed before 2025.
Maximum Deductible
$615
Plans may charge less or waive it. Tier 1-2 generic drugs are often exempt from the deductible.
Insulin Copay Cap
$35 / mo
No Part D plan may charge more than $35 for a one-month supply of any covered insulin.
ACIP Vaccines Under Part D
$0
All ACIP-recommended adult vaccines (Shingrix, RSV, Tdap, etc.) are $0 under Part D.
Part D Three-Phase Structure (2026)
Phase When It Applies What You Pay
Phase 1: Deductible Until plan deductible is met (max $615) Full cost of drugs (Tier 1-2 often exempt)
Phase 2: Initial Coverage After deductible until $2,100 out-of-pocket Copays or coinsurance per plan’s drug tiers
Phase 3: Catastrophic After $2,100 in out-of-pocket spending $0 for all covered Part D drugs
Drug Tier Structure
Tier Drug Type Typical Copay Range
Tier 1 Preferred generic drugs $0 – $5
Tier 2 Generic drugs $5 – $15
Tier 3 Preferred brand-name drugs $35 – $50
Tier 4 Non-preferred brand-name drugs $60 – $100+
Tier 5 Specialty drugs Coinsurance up to $2,100 OOP cap/year

Late Enrollment Penalty – Permanent: Skip Part D when first eligible without creditable drug coverage, and you owe 1% of the national base beneficiary premium per month without coverage – permanently added to your premium for life. Even if you take no medications, enroll in a basic plan. Plans start at just a few dollars per month.

Medicare Prescription Payment Plan (2025+): You can now spread Part D out-of-pocket costs across equal monthly payments throughout the year rather than paying large lump sums at the pharmacy. Contact your Part D plan to opt in.

05

Medicare Advantage (Part C)

CMS-mandated limits 2026

OOP Maximum – In-Network
$9,250
CMS maximum for in-network services. Many plans set a lower limit. Once hit, plan pays 100%.
OOP Maximum – Combined
$13,900
CMS maximum for combined in-network + out-of-network (applies to PPO plans).
Typical Monthly Premium
$0 – $50+
Many plans charge $0. You still pay Part B ($202.90). Some plans offer a Part B premium rebate.

2026 Warning – Leaner Benefits: Many Medicare Advantage plans reduced dental, vision, hearing, and OTC allowances for 2026. Industry projections suggest plans may add ~$23/month premium in 2027, and many plans may exit the market. Review your Annual Notice of Change every September.
Medicare Advantage Plan Types
Plan Type Network Rule Referrals? Best For
HMO In-network only (emergencies excepted) Yes Lowest premium; concentrated local care
PPO Lower cost in-network; higher cost out-of-network No More flexibility; some travel
D-SNP For dual Medicare-Medicaid enrollees Varies Limited income; often $0 premium and $0 OOP
C-SNP For specific chronic conditions Varies Diabetes, heart failure, ESRD management

06

Medicare Supplement (Medigap) Plans

Federally standardized – same benefits regardless of insurer

2026 Rate Alert: Medicare Supplement premiums are increasing significantly – many carriers raising rates 10-20%+. Part of this is driven by healthy beneficiaries moving to Medicare Advantage. If your premium has risen and you are in good health, you may be able to switch to a lower-cost carrier with identical coverage. Call us to compare rates.
Typical Monthly Premium Range
$100 – $400+
Varies by plan letter, age, gender, ZIP code, and tobacco use. Plan G and N most popular for new enrollees.
Part A Deductible (Plans G & N cover)
$1,676
Both Plan G and N cover the full Part A deductible per benefit period.
SNF Coinsurance (Plans G & N cover)
$209.50/day
Plans G and N cover days 21-100 in full – $209.50/day otherwise left to you.
Plan G vs. Plan N – Side by Side (2026)
Benefit Plan G Plan N
Part A deductible ($1,676 per benefit period) Covered 100% Covered 100%
Part A coinsurance – hospital days 61-90 ($419/day) Covered 100% Covered 100%
Part A lifetime reserve days 91-150 ($838/day) Covered 100% Covered 100%
SNF coinsurance days 21-100 ($209.50/day) Covered 100% Covered 100%
Hospice care coinsurance Covered 100% Covered 100%
First 3 pints of blood Covered 100% Covered 100%
Foreign travel emergency (80%, up to plan limits) Covered Covered
Part B annual deductible ($283) Not covered Not covered
Part B coinsurance (20% after deductible) Covered 100% Covered 100%*
Part B excess charges Covered 100% NOT covered

*Plan N pays 100% of Part B coinsurance except for up to $20 copay for office visits and up to $50 copay for ER visits that do not result in inpatient admission. Plans C and F not available to those eligible for Medicare on or after January 1, 2020.
Medigap Guaranteed Issue Rights
Situation States / Rule What It Means
Medigap Open Enrollment Period All states 6 months starting when you have Part B at 65 – guaranteed issue, no health questions, one-time right
Year-round guaranteed issue NY, MA, CT Can enroll any time with guaranteed acceptance
Birthday rule states CA, OR, ID, IL, LA, MO, NV Can switch plans around your birthday without underwriting
Prior authorization pilot (6-year CMS trial) AZ, NJ, OH, OK, TX, WA Medigap holders may need prior approval for 13 targeted procedures – AI-assisted review

07

Medicare Enrollment Periods

All Medicare Enrollment Periods at a Glance
Period When What You Can Do Miss It and…
Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) 7 months around 65th birthday (3 before, birthday month, 3 after) Enroll in Parts A, B, D; Medigap with guaranteed issue Late enrollment penalties + coverage delays
Annual Election Period (AEP) Oct 15 – Dec 7 (changes effective Jan 1) Switch MA plans; switch between MA and Original Medicare; change Part D plan Stuck in current plan for the year
MA Open Enrollment (MA OEP) Jan 1 – Mar 31 (changes effective 1st of following month) Switch MA plans; return to Original Medicare – one time only Must wait for next AEP
Medigap Open Enrollment 6 months starting month you have Part B at age 65 Any Medigap plan – guaranteed acceptance, no health questions Medical underwriting; possible denial
General Enrollment Period (GEP) Jan 1 – Mar 31; coverage begins July 1 Late Part A/B enrollment for those who missed IEP Months without coverage + permanent late penalties
Special Enrollment Period (SEP) Triggered by qualifying life event Part B: 8 months from job loss / Part D: 63 days from losing drug coverage Must use GEP; penalties apply
Late Enrollment Penalties
Part Penalty Formula Duration
Part B 10% of Part B premium for each full 12-month period without coverage Permanent – for life
Part D 1% of national base beneficiary premium per month without creditable coverage Permanent – for life
Part A (if you pay a premium) 10% of Part A premium for twice the number of years delayed Permanent – for life

Working past 65? You can delay Medicare without penalty only with active employer-sponsored group coverage from a company with 20+ employees. COBRA, retiree coverage, Marketplace plans, and coverage through employers with fewer than 20 employees do NOT qualify as creditable coverage for delay purposes.

08

Social Security – 2026 Key Figures

SSA.gov 2026

2026 COLA
2.8%
Cost-of-living adjustment applied to all Social Security benefits starting January 2026.
Max Taxable Earnings
$184,500
Social Security payroll tax (6.2%) applies up to this cap. Medicare tax has no income cap.
Max Benefit at FRA (67)
$4,207/mo
Maximum for a new retiree claiming at Full Retirement Age in 2026.
Earnings Per Credit
$1,890
Max 4 credits/year. 40 credits (10 years) needed for retirement benefits and premium-free Part A.
Earnings Test (Before FRA)
$24,480/yr
$2,040/month. Earn above this while collecting SS before FRA and benefits are temporarily reduced.
Earnings Test (FRA Year)
$65,160/yr
$5,430/month. Higher limit in the year you reach FRA. No limit at or after FRA.
Full Retirement Age (FRA) by Birth Year
Year of Birth Full Retirement Age
1943-1954 66
1955 66 years, 2 months
1956 66 years, 4 months
1957 66 years, 6 months
1958 66 years, 8 months
1959 66 years, 10 months
1960 and later 67
How Claiming Age Affects Your Monthly Benefit (FRA = 67)
Claiming Age % of Full Benefit (PIA) Example: $2,000 PIA Annual Difference vs. FRA
62 (earliest) 70.0% $1,400/mo -$7,200/yr
63 75.0% $1,500/mo -$6,000/yr
64 80.0% $1,600/mo -$4,800/yr
65 86.7% $1,733/mo -$3,204/yr
66 93.3% $1,867/mo -$1,596/yr
67 – Full Retirement Age 100.0% $2,000/mo Baseline
68 108.0% $2,160/mo +$1,920/yr
69 116.0% $2,320/mo +$3,840/yr
70 (maximum delay) 124.0% $2,480/mo +$5,760/yr
Federal Taxation of Social Security Benefits
Filing Status Combined Income* % of SS Benefits Potentially Taxable
Single Below $25,000 0%
Single $25,000 – $34,000 Up to 50%
Single Above $34,000 Up to 85%
Married Filing Jointly Below $32,000 0%
Married Filing Jointly $32,000 – $44,000 Up to 50%
Married Filing Jointly Above $44,000 Up to 85%

*Combined Income = AGI + Tax-Exempt Interest + 50% of Social Security benefits. Thresholds unchanged since 1983/1993. No law has eliminated SS benefit taxation as of 2026.
Spousal, Divorced, and Survivor Benefits
Benefit Type Amount Key Requirements
Spousal benefit at FRA Up to 50% of worker’s PIA Worker must have filed; spouse receives higher of own or spousal benefit
Spousal benefit at 62 32.5% of worker’s PIA Permanently reduced for early claiming
Divorced spouse benefit Up to 50% of ex-spouse’s PIA Marriage lasted 10+ years; you are unmarried; both parties 62+; does NOT affect ex-spouse’s benefit
Survivor benefit at FRA 100% of deceased’s PIA Available at age 60+ (50 if disabled)
Survivor benefit at 60 71.5% of deceased’s PIA Earliest claim age for survivors
Divorced survivor benefit Same as widow(er) Marriage lasted 10+ years; same rules as widow(er)
FICA Payroll Tax Rates 2026
Tax Employee Employer Self-Employed Income Cap
Social Security (OASDI) 6.2% 6.2% 12.4% $184,500
Medicare (HI) 1.45% 1.45% 2.9% No cap
Additional Medicare Tax 0.9% None 0.9% Over $200K single / $250K joint

09

Important 2026 Policy Updates

Confirmed changes vs. proposed changes

Most news coverage of Medicare and Social Security involves proposed changes, not enacted law. The updates below reflect confirmed policy as of 2026. Always verify with a licensed broker before adjusting coverage or financial plans based on news reports.
Social Security is Still Taxable – No Change in Law
No law has passed to eliminate federal taxation of SS benefits. The proposed “Big Beautiful Bill” does not include full SS tax elimination. It proposes a $6,000 exemption for individuals age 65+ with income under $75,000 (doubled for couples), but this is temporary (3 years) and not yet finalized law. Plan assuming SS benefits remain taxable at current thresholds.
SSA Overpayment Recovery – Reinstated at 50%
SSA reinstated its policy to withhold 50% of monthly benefits (not 100%) to recover overpaid amounts. SSA can also intercept your federal tax refund. If your spouse receives benefits based on your record, your spouse’s payments are also affected until the debt is repaid.
Applying for Medicare – Phone Applications Still Available
Enhanced identity verification for SS benefit applications only if you cannot use ssa.gov AND cannot pass identity questions by phone. If applying only for Medicare, call 800-772-1213 – phone applications are still accepted. You are not required to visit a local SSA office unless flagged for fraud. Apply early – processing times are longer due to staffing transitions.
WEP/GPO Retroactive Payments – Most People Are Not Eligible
Some beneficiaries affected by WEP/GPO are receiving retroactive payments. Most people are not eligible. Any email, text, or call offering to help you “claim your check” is almost certainly a scam. Check ssa.gov directly.
Prior Authorization Pilot for Medigap Holders – 6 States
A 6-year CMS pilot program requires prior authorization for certain services for Medigap holders in AZ, NJ, OH, OK, TX, and WA. Only 13 specific procedures are targeted. An AI-assisted review process makes approval decisions. Care could be delayed or denied – request prior authorization proactively before scheduled procedures.
Weight-Loss Drugs – Not Covered for Weight Loss Alone
Medicare will not cover anti-obesity medications (Wegovy, Zepbound, etc.) solely for weight loss. Coverage available only when prescribed for Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular risk, or obstructive sleep apnea. Even when Medicare allows the drug category, your Part D plan is not required to include it – always check your formulary.
Telehealth Extended Through December 31, 2027
Medicare telehealth services – including virtual visits with physicians, mental health providers, and other practitioners – extended through end of 2027. Includes both audio-video and audio-only visits where appropriate.
Medicare Advantage – Slimmer Benefits in 2026, More Changes Ahead in 2027
Many MA plans reduced dental, vision, hearing, and OTC allowances for 2026. Industry projections suggest plans may add ~$23/month premium in 2027, and millions of plan slots may exit the market. Review your Annual Notice of Change every September and compare options during AEP (Oct 15 – Dec 7).
Medicaid – Major Changes Coming January 1, 2027
If enacted, the One Big Beautiful Bill would require twice-per-year Medicaid eligibility recertification. People who cannot navigate the paperwork may lose coverage. Dual-eligible (Medicare + Medicaid) beneficiaries would also be affected. Begin preparing now.
Electronic Payment Requirement for Social Security
All Social Security beneficiaries must receive payments via direct deposit, prepaid debit card, or other approved digital method. Paper checks are being phased out. If you or a family member still receives paper checks, contact SSA to set up direct deposit promptly.

Questions About Your Specific Situation?

Our licensed bilingual team serves clients in all 50 states. We compare plans, verify your doctors and medications, and provide lifetime support – always at no cost to you.