The fundamental difference
The most common confusion in American healthcare: these two programs sound similar but serve different purposes.
| Medicare | Medicaid | |
|---|---|---|
| Who runs it | Federal (CMS) | Joint federal-state (Ohio Department of Medicaid) |
| Who's eligible | 65+, disabled (24 months SSDI), ESRD, ALS | Low-income people of any age meeting categorical requirements |
| Eligibility basis | Age or disability — NOT income | Income and (for some categories) assets |
| Funding | Payroll taxes + premiums + general revenue | State and federal tax revenue (federal matches state spending) |
| Premiums | Part A free for most; Part B $202.90/mo (2026) | Free for most enrollees; small copays for some services |
| Geographic scope | Nationwide | State-specific (rules differ by state) |
| Long-term nursing home | Not covered (except short-term skilled care) | Covered indefinitely for qualified beneficiaries |
The two programs aren't competitors — they cover different populations and different needs. About 20% of Medicare beneficiaries also have Medicaid (dual-eligibles).
How Medicare works in Ohio
Medicare in Ohio works the same as Medicare anywhere — it's a federal program. Key features for Ohioans:
- Part A (hospital insurance) — free for most enrollees; covers inpatient hospital, SNF, hospice, some home health.
- Part B (medical insurance) — $202.90/month standard 2026 premium; covers doctor visits, outpatient, DME.
- Part C (Medicare Advantage) — private alternative bundling A, B, often D plus extras.
- Part D (drug coverage) — outpatient prescriptions; $2,100 annual OOP cap in 2026.
Ohio Medicare beneficiaries can pair Original Medicare with a Medigap policy for cost-sharing protection, or choose Medicare Advantage. Both work statewide.
How Medicaid works in Ohio
Ohio Medicaid covers more than 3 million Ohioans (about 1 in 4 state residents). Major eligibility categories:
- Adults under 65 below 138% FPL — Ohio expanded Medicaid under the ACA, covering childless adults.
- Children — up to 200% FPL through Medicaid; CHIP (Healthy Start) extends to 211% FPL.
- Pregnant women — up to 200% FPL.
- Aged, Blind, and Disabled (ABD) — Medicaid for 65+ or disabled with income below state thresholds.
- Long-Term Care Medicaid — for nursing home or HCBS waiver eligibility.
Most Ohio Medicaid enrollees are in managed care plans — Aetna Better Health, AmeriHealth Caritas Ohio, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Buckeye Health Plan, CareSource, Humana Healthy Horizons in Ohio, Molina Healthcare, and UnitedHealthcare Community Plan. Medicaid covers comprehensive medical care, dental, vision, mental health, substance abuse treatment, and long-term services.
Dual-eligibles: Medicare AND Medicaid
About 20% of Ohio Medicare beneficiaries also qualify for Medicaid — "dual-eligibles." For duals, the programs coordinate:
- Medicare is primary for medical services covered by both programs.
- Medicaid is secondary for services Medicare covers but with cost-sharing — Medicaid often picks up Medicare deductibles, copays, and coinsurance.
- Medicaid covers services Medicare doesn't — dental, vision, hearing aids, transportation, long-term care, and other benefits.
- Extra Help (LIS) is automatic for duals — Part D premiums and copays are dramatically reduced or eliminated.
In Ohio, dual-eligibles can enroll in Next Generation MyCare Ohio — an integrated plan combining Medicare, Medicaid, and HCBS waiver services. MyCare launched January 1, 2026 in 29 counties and is rolling out statewide through August 2026 with four MCOs (Anthem, Buckeye, CareSource, Molina). See our MyCare Ohio guide.
Medicare Savings Programs (partial Medicaid)
Even if you don't qualify for full Medicaid, you may qualify for Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs) — state-administered programs that help pay Medicare costs:
| Program | What it pays | Approx. 2026 income limit (single) |
|---|---|---|
| QMB (Qualified Medicare Beneficiary) | Part A & B premiums, deductibles, coinsurance, copays | $1,304/month |
| SLMB (Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary) | Part B premium | $1,562/month |
| QI (Qualifying Individual) | Part B premium | $1,756/month |
Asset limits apply: $9,660 single / $14,470 couple for QMB/SLMB/QI in 2026. Apply through your Ohio county Job & Family Services. Most MSP recipients also automatically qualify for Extra Help (Part D Low-Income Subsidy).
Long-term care: Medicaid's biggest role
The single largest gap in Medicare is long-term care coverage. Medicare doesn't cover:
- Long-term nursing home stays
- Assisted living
- Memory care
- In-home personal care attendants (beyond limited home health)
For these services, Ohio Medicaid Long-Term Care is the primary payer for those who qualify (after meeting income and asset limits, typically requiring asset spend-down). Ohio also operates HCBS waivers like PASSPORT (for seniors 60+) and the Assisted Living Waiver.
See our Does Medicare cover nursing home care? page for the full long-term care picture.
