What is a Medicare Part D plan required to do before disenrolling a plan member for not paying premiums?
If a person stops paying their Medicare Part D or Medicare Advantage plan's monthly premium, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) allows the Medicare plan to disenroll the member from the plan after at least a two-month
grace period and proper notice.
Tip: Contact your Medicare plan immediately if your Medicare drug plan notifies you about being disenrolled from the plan for not paying your monthly premiums. The toll-free telephone number for Member Services is found on your plan's Member ID card.
During the minimum two-month
grace period, the Medicare plan must:
- First, send a bill to the person with Medicare with the amount due and payment due date.
- Next, the plan is required to send a notice (first notice) within 15 calendar days of the premium due date if the premium isn't paid. The notice must explain that the individual will be disenrolled from the plan if payment hasn't been made by the end of the grace period (no less than two (2) months beginning "on the 1st day of the month for which the premium is unpaid").
A few related Questions and Answers about failing to pay your monthly premium and disenrollment
Question: Will a Medicare plan always disenroll a plan member if they don't pay their premiums?
No. According to the CMS Medicare Part D Enrollment manual
(Section 50.3.1)), a Medicare Part D plan has the option to do "nothing"
and "allow the member to remain enrolled in the same [Medicare Part D
plan]".
Question: If a person is qualified for the Medicare Part D Extra
Help or Low-Income Subsidy program, will they receive addition
notification of their unpaid premiums?
Possibly. Medicare allows a Medicare plan to have additional
notification options for plan members qualifying for the Low-Income
Subsidy (LIS) who fail to pay their monthly premiums.
Medicare allows that a Medicare plan,
"has the discretion to offer this
[additional notification] option to individuals who qualify for the
low-income subsidy within each of its [Medicare Part D plans]. If the
[Medicare plan] offers this option in one of its [Part D plans], it
must apply the policy to all such individuals in that [plan]. . . .
Plans may also send additional notices or attempt to contact the
individual regarding delinquent premiums. If the person with Medicare
still doesn't pay the premium, the plan can disenroll them as of the
first day of the month following the end of the grace period. When this
happens, the plan will send a final notice to the individual about the
disenrollment action."
Question: If the plan Member makes a partial premium payment, will this halt disenrollment?
No. The CMS manual notes: "While the sponsor may accept partial
payments, it has the right to ask for full payment within the grace
period. If the member does not pay the required amount within the grace
period, the effective date of disenrollment is the first day of the
month after the grace period ends."
Question: If I pay my unpaid Medicare plan premiums after
being disenrolled, will the plan then reinstate my Medicare Part D plan
coverage?
No. Paying back premiums
will not get you back into your Medicare plan - you will still need a valid enrollment period to rejoin a Medicare plan.
Question: Can the Medicare plan attempt to collect any unpaid premiums even after disenrollment?
Yes. CMS allows the Medicare Part D plan "to take action to
collect the unpaid premiums from the beneficiary at any point during or
after this [collection or disenrollment] process."
Question: If I am disenrolled from my Part D plan for not
paying my premium, can the Medicare plan make me pay the past, unpaid
premiums if I decide to rejoin the same plan next year?
Yes. The CMS Medicare Part D Enrollment manual notes that if "a
member is disenrolled for failure to pay premiums and attempts to
re-enroll in the organization, the PDP sponsor may require the
individual to pay any outstanding premiums owed to the PDP sponsor
before considering the enrollment request to be 'complete.' "
Additional Medicare Safeguards
In addition to the safeguards established by Medicare, the plan may send
interim notices of unpaid premiums after the plan has sent the initial
non-payment notice. The CMS Enrollment manual notes that the plan's
notices must:
- "Alert the member that the premiums are delinquent;
- Provide the member with an explanation of disenrollment procedures advising the
member that failure to pay the premiums within the grace period that began on the 1st of
the month for which premium was unpaid will result in termination, and the proposed
effective date of this action; and
- Explain whether the sponsor requires full payment within the grace period (including the
payment of all premiums falling due during the intervening days, when and as they
become due, according to the terms of the membership agreement) in order to avoid
termination.
If a notice is returned to the organization as un-deliverable, the
sponsor should immediately
implement its procedure for researching a potential change of address."
If the Medicare plan finds that the plan member has moved out of the
plan's service area, "the sponsor must disenroll the beneficiary for the
earlier disenrollment date" corresponding to when the person left the
plan's service area.
Sources include:
Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 3 - Eligibility,
Enrollment and Disenrollment - Updated: August 19, 2011 (Revised:
November 16, 2011, August 7, 2012, August 30, 2013, August 30, 2014,
July 6, 2015, September 1, 2015, September 14, 2015, December 30, 2015,
May 27, 2016, August 25, 2016, June 15, 2017, July 31, 2018 & August
12, 2020)
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