If you are age 65 and eligible to receive Social Security benefits (or married to someone eligible to receive them), then you are also automatically eligible for Medicare Part A (free hospital insurance) and Medicare Part B (medical insurance for which you pay premiums), a.k.a. “original Medicare”.
If this is the case, then you’ll get a red-white-and-blue Medicare card in the mail 3 months before your 65th birthday.
You can apply to receive Medicare benefits even if you haven’t retired. If you’re coming up on 65 and you don’t yet receive Social Security benefits, SSDI or benefits from the Railroad Retirement Board, visit your local Social Security Administration office or dial (800) 772-1213 or go to www.ssa.gov to determine your eligibility.
If you are eligible, you have the choice of accepting or rejecting Part B coverage. If you want Medicare Part A and Medicare Part B, then you should sign your Medicare card and keep it in your wallet. If you don’t want Part B, you put an “X” in the refusal box on the back of the Medicare card form, and send the form to the address shown right below where your signature goes. About four weeks later, you will get a new Medicare card indicating that you only have Part A coverage.
When you are enrolled in Medicare Part A & Part B (sometimes called “original Medicare”), you can join a Medicare Advantage plan (Part C). Anyone enrolled in Part A, B or C becomes eligible for prescription drug coverage (Part D).
If you are 65 or older and aren’t eligible for Medicare Part A, you can still sign up for Part B as long as you are a U.S. citizen or a legal resident of this country for five years or longer.
If you choose not to enroll in Part B during your initial enrollment period, you have another annual chance to sign up for it during a “general enrollment period” from January 1 through March 31, with Part B coverage commencing July 1.
If you already have medical insurance through a group health plan at your workplace or your spouse’s workplace, you can either enroll in Part B while you are still covered by that plan or enroll in Part B within eight months of leaving your job or losing your health coverage, whichever happens first.
Medicare has enrollment periods that allow you to do this.
Individuals with end-stage kidney failure who need dialysis or a transplant may qualify for Medicare regardless of age. Upon diagnosis, they can contact the SSA. Medicare coverage usually takes effect three months after a patient begins dialysis. People with Lou Gehrig’s Disease (ALS) are automatically enrolled in Medicare as soon as they begin receiving SSDI payments. Americans who are under 65 and disabled also qualify for Medicare.
Your first stop should be the Social Security Administration – (800) 772-1213 or www.socialsecurity.gov. You can also visit www.medicare.gov and www.cms.hhs.gov
Mark S. Gardner may be reached at 214-762-2327
MarkGardner@RetireWellDallas.com
www.retirewelldallas.com