Medicare Plans for the Life and Annuity Specialist

The Great Resignation, and a Great Retirement

The cost structure for Original Medicare is universal. Your clients pay the same premium as every other American in their financial position, and they’re responsible for the same percentage of out-of-pocket costs when they use their coverage.

With most Part B claims, for example, after a client pays the standard annual deductible ($233 in 2022), Medicare pays for 80% of covered services and the client pays 20% out of pocket.

However, your client doesn’t have the protection of an out-of-pocket maximum. The sky’s the limit when it comes to how much the client will pay in a given year — a sobering scenario if the sky falls in terms of the client’s health.

By contrast, while there’s very little that’s universal about Medicare Advantage plan costs, all Medicare Advantage plans do feature the protection of an annual out-of-pocket maximum. If your clients choose Medicare Advantage for their health care needs, they can plan for the absolute maximum they’ll have to pay for their covered services in a given plan year.

Does that mean Medicare Advantage is always the way to go? It does not. Every Medicare Advantage plan has its own unique cost structure, and perhaps a particular client of yours would benefit instead from adding a Medicare supplement plan to help cover some costs not covered by Original Medicare.

Helping your clients dissect those details — based on your knowledge or on advice from an expert in the field — is crucial to providing them with peace of mind.

“How Do I Get the Most for My Money?”

Some things related to Medicare are best left to the experts, but some things that impact dollars and cents are simply common sense — if clients have the good sense to look into them.

See also  H&R Block Users Say They Can't File Their Taxes as Deadline Looms

You would be surprised how many people on Medicare miss out on maximizing their benefits simply because they lose track of their coverage.

For example, clients may have felt excited to learn during the process of switching from Original Medicare to a Medicare Advantage plan that their new benefits include $800 a year to spend on over-the-counter medicines and health care supplies. But in the process of switching, clients also learn about a dozen other things, and, three months later, they’ve completely forgotten about the over-the-counter benefit.

That’s why marketplaces can be useful guides through Medicare. Once someone purchases a Medicare Advantage plan from GoHealth, for example, our TeleCare team becomes their concierge of sorts, steering them through the onboarding process and then checking in with them while they’re on the plan to make sure they’re getting the most out of it. We help members schedule their first doctor’s appointment, for example. And while we’re at it, we’ll remind them if their policy offers them a complimentary ride to and from the doctor if they need it.

A private marketplace may be able to work with an agent, broker or financial planner to support the client’s efforts to get and use Medicare coverage.

Every once in a while, offer to take a look at each client’s Medicare policy, or at least have a conversation about it. A healthy dialogue can lead to a wealth of discoveries.

Lamaretta Simmons-Kelderman, is vice president of telecare at GoHealth, a company that runs a private Medicare plan marketplace.