medicare covers first hundred days

Design Highlights

  • Medicare covers skilled nursing facility care for up to 100 days per benefit period, not long-term nursing home care.
  • To qualify, you must have a three-day inpatient hospital stay and start SNF care within 30 days of discharge.
  • Days 1–20 of SNF care are fully covered; from days 21–100, you pay a coinsurance of $217 per day in 2026.
  • After 100 days, Medicare provides no coverage, leaving individuals responsible for all costs.
  • Only skilled services like rehab are covered; general assistance with daily living is not included.

Maneuvering Medicare nursing home coverage can feel like trying to decipher a secret code. First things first: Medicare doesn’t cover long-term nursing home care. Nope. It’s all about that short-term skilled nursing facility (SNF) care. You can think of it as a limited-time offer—just like a sale at your favorite store, but with a lot more paperwork and a lot less fun.

Navigating Medicare nursing home coverage is like cracking a secret code—only short-term SNF care qualifies, no long-term stays allowed.

So, let’s break it down. To qualify for SNF coverage, you need to have a prior inpatient hospital stay. And not just any stay; it must be at least three consecutive days. The clock doesn’t start ticking until you’re officially checked in as an inpatient. And forget about that day you’re discharged; it doesn’t count. You have to start your SNF care within 30 days of leaving the hospital, or you’re out of luck. Oh, and a doctor has to give the green light. Because what fun would it be without another layer of bureaucracy?

Once you’re in, Medicare has your back—for a limited time. They’ll cover up to 100 days of SNF care per benefit period. Sounds generous, right? Well, it’s more like a ticking time bomb. Day one to day twenty? You’re golden. It’s $0 out of pocket after meeting the Part A deductible. But watch out! From day 21 to 100, you’ll start paying coinsurance. In 2026, that’ll cost you $217 a day. And after day 100? Guess what? Medicare pays absolutely zero. Yes, you read that right. A big fat goose egg.

What’s a benefit period, you ask? It starts when your hospital or SNF care begins and ends after you’ve gone 60 days without any inpatient care. If you find yourself in the hospital again, congratulations! You could start a new benefit period and, yes, enjoy another 100 days of coverage. But here’s the kicker: if you just need general assistance with daily living, Medicare isn’t interested. They only cover skilled services—think wound care or rehab, not someone helping you take a bath. Unlike workers’ compensation, which covers occupational diseases and injuries regardless of fault, Medicare has strict eligibility requirements that can leave many without the coverage they need. Additionally, Medicare covers SNF services up to 100 days in a nursing home after qualifying hospital stays and if skilled nursing is needed.

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