By Sneha S K

March 11 (Reuters) – A congressional committee’s investigators released a report on Tuesday that found the average American senior’s Medicare premiums ‌last year were about 10% higher due to alleged overpayments to private ‌Medicare Advantage plans.

Medicare Part B premiums that most seniors pay were partly pushed up by controversial ​health-insurer practices such as adding diagnoses to trigger higher payments, according to the Joint Economic Committee, a bipartisan group of lawmakers that advises Congress on financial matters.

Medicare is a U.S. government program for individuals aged 65 and older or those with disabilities. ‌The government reimburses private health ⁠plans, called Medicare Advantage, a set amount for each patient but pays more if patients are sicker.

Medicare Part B provides coverage ⁠for outpatient services including doctor visits, diagnostic tests and physician-administered drugs.

The committee found that in 2025 the federal government paid health insurers who offer Medicare Advantage plans up ​to $84 billion ​more than it would have cost to ​cover the same beneficiaries under ‌its own government-run Medicare plans.

It estimates Medicare overpayments increased Part B premiums by $212 for enrollees in 2025, totaling $13.4 billion in higher premiums.

These higher Part B premiums negatively impact seniors as they are deducted directly from their social security checks.

By 2035, per-person premiums are projected to double from $2,440 to about $5,000, the report found, making the ‌plans less affordable to seniors.

The Committee calculated the ​overpayments based on findings by the congressional Medicare ​Payment Advisory Commission, or MedPAC.

“Numerous ​experts continue to warn that making policy based on MedPAC’s ‌fundamentally flawed data, methodology and extrapolations could ​harm 35 million ​Medicare beneficiaries who choose MA for more affordable, high-quality health care coverage and who will renew their coverage in October of 2026,” said a spokesperson ​for AHIP, an association ‌representing U.S. health insurers.

Government investigators have been probing how health insurers’ billing ​practices have contributed to Medicare Advantage costs.

(Reporting by Sneha S K ​in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)