Design Highlights
- Dental, vision, and hearing aid coverages are diminishing, leading to increased out-of-pocket expenses for enrollees.
- Wellness services, including gym memberships and transportation for medical appointments, are being restricted or eliminated.
- Networks of doctors and hospitals are narrowing, reducing access to primary care and facilities for enrollees.
- Increased costs include a higher Part B deductible and rising copays for inpatient days, straining enrollees’ finances.
- New policies are imposing stricter enrollment rules and expanded prior authorizations, causing delays in receiving necessary treatments.
In 2026, Medicare Advantage plans are about to take a nosedive. Enrollees, get ready; the benefits you may have counted on are shrinking faster than a balloon at a kid’s birthday party.
Dental coverage? Bye-bye to the days of decent allowances. Vision care benefits? They’re not looking so bright anymore with lower exam allowances. And those sweet hearing aid discounts? Dropped, leaving many to face higher out-of-pocket costs.
Dental coverage is vanishing, vision benefits are dimming, and hearing aid discounts are gone—prepare for higher out-of-pocket costs ahead!
But wait, there’s more! Gym memberships and wellness perks? Eliminated or restricted. Because who needs to stay fit, right? Transportation services for medical appointments? Reduced in frequency. So, good luck getting to your doctor’s office.
As if that wasn’t enough, other service cuts are creeping in like an unwanted guest at a party. Over-the-counter item allowances are getting slashed, too. Meal delivery services for the chronically ill? Seriously, what were they thinking? Fewer hours of in-home support services will make it a real challenge for those who need it most.
Telehealth follow-up rules have tightened, meaning more red tape and less access for the very people who need it. Emergency room follow-up billing risks? Oh, they’re skyrocketing.
On top of that, network constraints are tightening like a noose. Doctor networks are narrowing, which means fewer primary care providers are available. Hospital networks are shrinking, too, reducing in-network facility options.
If you need a specialist, good luck; new referral requirements make that a Herculean task. And for rural enrollees? Geographic coverage areas are shrinking. Rural seniors face even fewer replacement options when insurers withdraw from their markets entirely. What a joy!
Let’s not forget about out-of-pocket cost increases. The in-network maximum out-of-pocket limit is now a jaw-dropping $9,250. That’s right—$9,250! The average MA-PD premium is also declining, but many enrollees will still face increased costs due to the higher out-of-pocket limits.
Interestingly, nearly all beneficiaries (98%) have access to a MA-PD with no additional monthly premium in 2026, but that doesn’t mean the overall value is improving.
Daily copays for inpatient days are soaring, and Part D out-of-pocket maximums just got a hefty boost. Premiums and deductibles are playing their own game of leapfrog, with Part B deductible rising to $283.
And just when you thought it couldn’t get worse, policy changes are here to ruin your day. Unhealthy foods are excluded from supplemental benefits. Alcohol coverage? Gone. Tobacco benefits? Elimination time. Life insurance? Nope. Weight-loss drug coverage? Reduced.
The stability of plans is questionable, with some possibly disappearing altogether. Enrollment? Stricter rules. Treatment delays? Yup, thanks to expanded prior authorizations.






