Medicare Basics

Medicare Basics in Ohio: Parts A, B, C, and D Explained

Medicare has four parts: Part A covers hospital stays (free for most people once you've paid enough payroll taxes), Part B covers doctor visits and outpatient care ($202.90/mo standard premium in 2026), Part C (Medicare Advantage) is a private alternative to A and B with extra benefits but a network, and Part D covers prescription drugs through private insurers.

Part A — Hospital insurance

Part A covers inpatient hospital stays, skilled nursing facility care (after a qualifying hospital stay), hospice care, and limited home health services. Roughly 99% of Ohioans on Medicare don't pay a premium for Part A — if you or your spouse worked and paid Medicare payroll taxes for at least 10 years (40 quarters), Part A is "premium-free."

What Part A does cost you when you actually use it in 2026:

Cost in 2026Amount
Inpatient deductible (per benefit period)$1,736
Hospital coinsurance, days 61–90$434/day
Lifetime reserve days (60 total)$868/day
Skilled nursing facility, days 21–100$217/day

Important: Part A uses benefit periods, not calendar years. A benefit period starts the day you're admitted and ends 60 consecutive days after you've been out of inpatient care. If you're readmitted on day 61, that's a new benefit period — and a new $1,736 deductible.

Watch the 'observation' trap

If a hospital admits you under observation status rather than as an inpatient, Part A doesn't cover the stay — Part B does. And the stay won't count toward the 3-day inpatient requirement that triggers Part A skilled nursing coverage. Always ask whether you've been formally admitted as an inpatient.

Part B — Medical insurance

Part B covers doctor visits, outpatient services, preventive care, lab tests, durable medical equipment, mental health care, and most outpatient prescription drugs administered in a clinic (chemotherapy, infusions). It's the part you actually use most often.

The 2026 standard Part B premium is $202.90 per month, deducted from your Social Security check if you're receiving one. The annual deductible is $283, after which you pay 20% coinsurance for most services — with no annual cap. That uncapped 20% is the single biggest reason Ohioans buy Medigap or enroll in Medicare Advantage.

If your income is higher

Higher-income beneficiaries pay an Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA) on top of the standard premium. IRMAA in 2026 is based on your 2024 tax return (Social Security uses a two-year lookback):

2024 MAGI — single2024 MAGI — joint2026 Part B premium
≤ $109,000≤ $218,000$202.90 (standard)
$109,001 – $137,000$218,001 – $274,000$284.10
$137,001 – $171,000$274,001 – $342,000$405.80
$171,001 – $205,000$342,001 – $410,000$527.50
$205,001 – $500,000$410,001 – $750,000$649.20
≥ $500,001≥ $750,001$689.90

IRMAA brackets are cliffs, not a smooth phase-in: one dollar of additional income can push you into the next tier and cost you hundreds per year. A one-time event (selling a rental property, a large Roth conversion) can trigger IRMAA two years later. If your income drops afterward because of a "life-changing event" — retirement, divorce, the death of a spouse — you can file Form SSA-44 to ask Social Security to use your current income instead.

Confused about IRMAA?A licensed Medicare agent can help you plan around the cliffs.
Find a Medicare Agent

Part C — Medicare Advantage

Medicare Advantage (MA) is a private alternative to Original Medicare. When you enroll in an MA plan, you still have Medicare — but instead of the government paying claims directly, you assign your benefits to a private insurer who replaces Parts A and B (and usually Part D) with a single bundled plan.

Most Medicare Advantage plans in Ohio are $0-premium beyond your Part B premium, and many include dental, vision, hearing, fitness (SilverSneakers or Renew Active), over-the-counter drug allowances, and transportation benefits that Original Medicare doesn't cover.

The trade-off: MA plans use networks (HMO or PPO), require prior authorization for many services, and your costs vary based on how often you use care. The 2026 in-network out-of-pocket maximum is $9,250 for in-network services on Medicare Advantage plans — meaning that's the most you'll pay for Part A and B services in a calendar year, no matter how sick you get.

In Ohio, the major Medicare Advantage carriers are Aetna, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Humana, Medical Mutual of Ohio, UnitedHealthcare, Wellcare, Devoted Health, and CareSource. Network coverage varies wildly — a plan that's strong in Cuyahoga County may have gaps in rural southeast Ohio.

Part D — Prescription drug coverage

Part D is private prescription drug insurance. You can get it either as a standalone PDP (paired with Original Medicare and/or Medigap) or as part of a Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug plan (MAPD).

2026 is the second full year of the Inflation Reduction Act's $2,000 out-of-pocket cap (now indexed up to $2,100). Once your out-of-pocket drug costs reach that cap in a calendar year, you pay $0 for covered drugs for the rest of the year. The maximum deductible any plan can charge in 2026 is $615, and the national base premium is about $38.99/month (though plans range from under $0 to over $100/month).

You can also spread your annual out-of-pocket costs into monthly payments through the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan — a feature added by the IRA. Useful if you have a single expensive drug that would otherwise blow through your deductible in January.

Medigap (Medicare Supplement) — the fifth option

Medigap isn't technically a "part" of Medicare, but it's how most Ohioans who stick with Original Medicare cover the 20% Part B coinsurance and other cost-sharing.

Medigap plans are standardized by letter (A, B, C, D, F, G, K, L, M, N) — meaning a Plan G from Aetna covers exactly the same benefits as a Plan G from Mutual of Omaha. The only differences are price, customer service, and rate-increase history.

The two most popular plans in Ohio are Plan G (covers everything except the small annual Part B deductible) and Plan N (Plan G minus excess charges and with small copays — typically $50–$75/month cheaper). Plan F is still available to anyone who turned 65 before January 1, 2020.

Ohio does not have a "Medigap birthday rule" like California or Oregon — meaning if you want to switch Medigap plans after your initial 6-month open enrollment, you can be medically underwritten and denied based on health. Read more about Medigap in Ohio →

How the parts fit together

For most Ohioans, the practical choice is between two routes:

Route 1: Original Medicare + Medigap + a standalone Part D plan. You pay your Part B premium + a Medigap premium (~$120–$200/mo in Ohio) + a Part D premium (~$0–$80/mo). You can see any provider in the U.S. who accepts Medicare. Costs are highly predictable. Best for snowbirds, frequent travelers, people with serious or chronic conditions, and people who want maximum flexibility.

Route 2: Medicare Advantage (Part C) with built-in drug coverage. You pay your Part B premium and often nothing more in monthly premium. You get extra benefits (dental, vision, fitness, OTC). You're limited to the plan's network. Best for people who stay in Ohio, are reasonably healthy, and want lower up-front costs.

People with retiree coverage from OPERS, STRS, federal service, the VA, or a former employer have a different decision — see our Ohio pensions guide.

2026 Medicare figures at a glance

Item2026 Amount
Part B standard premium$202.90/mo
Part B deductible$283
Part A inpatient deductible$1,736 per benefit period
Part D out-of-pocket cap$2,100
Part D max deductible$615
Part D national base premium$38.99/mo
Medicare Advantage in-network MOOP$9,250
Medigap Plan K out-of-pocket limit$8,000
Medigap Plan L out-of-pocket limit$4,000
HSA contribution limit (self-only)$4,400
HSA contribution limit (family)$8,750

Sources: CMS 2026 Medicare Parts A & B Premiums and Deductibles (Federal Register); CMS 2026 Part D Final Rule; IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-19.

Common questions

Do I have to enroll in Medicare at 65 if I'm still working?
Not necessarily. If you have group health coverage through an employer with 20 or more employees, you can delay Part B without penalty as long as that coverage is active. At companies under 20 employees, Medicare is generally your primary insurance and you should enroll on time. See our Working Past 65 guide for the details.
Is Medicare free?
Part A is premium-free for almost everyone, but Part B has a monthly premium ($202.90 standard in 2026), Part D has a premium, and you'll have deductibles, copays, and coinsurance. The only program that makes Medicare effectively free is the Medicare Savings Program for lower-income Ohioans — administered through Ohio Medicaid.
What's the difference between Medicare and Medicaid in Ohio?
Medicare is federal health insurance based on age (65+) or disability. Medicaid is a state-federal program based on income and resources. Some Ohioans qualify for both — they're called 'dual-eligibles' — and MyCare Ohio integrates the two into a single plan in 29 demonstration counties.
Can I have Medicare and employer coverage at the same time?
Yes. If both are active, coordination of benefits rules determine which pays first. Generally, at employers with 20+ employees, the employer plan is primary and Medicare is secondary; at smaller employers, Medicare is primary.
When can I change Medicare plans?
The big window is the Annual Enrollment Period (Oct 15 – Dec 7) when anyone can change Medicare Advantage or Part D plans. The Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (Jan 1 – Mar 31) lets MA enrollees switch once to a different MA plan or to Original Medicare. Various Special Enrollment Periods cover life events like moving, losing employer coverage, or qualifying for Extra Help.