Posts Tagged ‘Medicare has Two Parts’
Medicare has two parts:
- Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance), which helps pay for care in a hospital and skilled nursing facility, home health care, and hospice care; and
- Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance), which helps pay for doctors, outpatient hospital care, and other medical services.
Most people don’t have to pay for Medicare Part A. Most people pay for Medicare Part B.
To find out how you enroll in Medicare Part A & B, please go to My Medicare Enrollment
Medicare is a Health Insurance Program for:
- People age 65 or older.
- People under age 65 with certain disabilities.
- People of all ages with End-Stage Renal Disease (permanent kidney failure requiring dialysis or a transplant).
Medicare has Two Parts:
- Part A (Hospital Insurance)Most people don’t have to pay for Part A.
- Part B (Medical Insurance)Most people pay monthly for Part B.
You can choose different ways to get the services covered by Medicare. Depending on where you live, you may have different choices. In most cases, when you first get Medicare, you are in Original Medicare. You may want to consider a Medicare Prescription Drug Plan to add drug coverage. Or, you may want to consider a Medicare Advantage Plan (like an HMO or PPO) that provides all your Part A, Part B, and often Part D coverage. You make a choice when you are first eligible for Medicare. Each year you can review your health and prescription needs and switch to a different plan in the fall.
As long as you have both Part A and Part B, items covered by Part A and Part B are covered whether you have Original Medicare, or you belong to a Medicare Advantage Plan (like an HMO or PPO). For more information see the Your Medicare Coverage database.