If you rely on Medicare for your health care coverage, it’s vital to keep up with changes to the program costs. This year, beneficiaries are seeing higher costs and limitations to non-medical benefits.

Staying informed is one of the best ways to avoid wasting money in retirement, so here’s a breakdown of Medicare costs in 2026.

Find Out: 14 benefits seniors are entitled to but often forget to claim

1. Prepare for a significant Medicare Part B premium increase

The standard Medicare Part B premium rose from $185 per month in 2025 to $202.90 in 2026, a 9.68% jump, or more than double last year’s increase.

The annual Part B deductible increased as well, from $257 to $283, a 10.11% bump.

Who really has the cheapest auto insurance in your area? Check your zip code here.

2. Plan for higher prescription drug costs before coverage kicks in

Prescription drug costs under Medicare Part D have also risen. The federal cap on the standard Part D deductible is now $615, up from $590 in 2025.

While some plans may still offer lower deductibles or $0 premiums, Medicare.gov warns that drug costs and coverage details vary by plan, so enrollees may see different out-of-pocket amounts depending on the coverage they choose.

3. Expect a higher catastrophic threshold under Part D

Medicare Part D’s catastrophic spending limit (the point where your out-of-pocket drug costs stop) increased from $2,000 to $2,100.

Once you hit that threshold, Medicare covers 100% of your covered prescription costs. Even with the small increase, the Inflation Reduction Act maintains strong protections for seniors with chronic or high-cost medication needs.

Retire like the rich: 14 ways you could build wealth in your 50s.

4. Don’t expect the hold-harmless rule to shield you

Medicare’s “hold-harmless” provision protects many beneficiaries from seeing their Social Security checks drop as Medicare Part B premiums rise.

Under this rule, a beneficiary’s Social Security payment can’t go down if the dollar amount of their Part B premium increase is larger than the dollar amount of their annual Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA).

Because the rule ties protection to the size of a person’s COLA, it mainly helps beneficiaries with smaller Social Security payments. Those receiving larger monthly benefits typically experience full Part B premium increases.

5. Your IRMAA could go up

Higher-income seniors may also have to pay IRMAA, the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount.

The IRMAA is a surcharge that higher-income participants may pay if their modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceeds IRS thresholds. These added charges apply to both Part B and Part D.

If you do pay IRMAA charges, the amount is calculated on a sliding scale with five income brackets. Figures are updated yearly with inflation and have a two-year lag time. For 2026, IRMAA income brackets have increased by 3% and surcharges have risen 9%.

6. Auto-renewal is coming for the MPPP

The Medicare Prescription Payment Plan (MPPP) allows enrollees to spread out their prescription drug costs across the year rather than paying large upfront amounts at the pharmacy.

In 2026, a new rule makes participating easier. If you opt in, you’ll be automatically re-enrolled in future years unless you choose to leave.

You’ll receive an annual notice of updated terms. If you do decide to exit the program, providers must process your request within the outlined timeframe.

Make Money: 8 things to do if you’re barely scraping by financially

7. Supplemental benefits curtailed

Medicare Advantage plans have increasingly offered “extras” like meal deliveries, OTC benefits, transportation, and non-medical supports for chronic illness. However, new rules restrict services previously covered.

Plans will no longer be allowed to offer:

These changes don’t overhaul Medicare Advantage, but they do trim the perks, which may shift seniors’ focus back to networks, drug coverage, and core benefits.

8. Prior authorization requirements are expanding

Historically, Original Medicare requires prior authorization only for a small set of services; that’s changing.

In 2026, Arizona, New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, and Washington are piloting a new model expanding prior authorization requirements for several outpatient procedures.

These include:

Skin and tissue substitutes

Electrical nerve stimulator implants

Knee arthroscopy for osteoarthritis

Emergency and inpatient services remain excluded.

Prior authorization is already common in Medicare Advantage, but this is the first meaningful test of expanding it under Original Medicare.

9. Some dual-eligible seniors could lose Medicaid coverage

Medicaid requires states to verify enrollees’ eligibility on a recurring basis, including reconfirming income and financial resources.

These verification checks can create administrative challenges, especially for people with complex health needs.

For Medicare-Medicaid “dual eligibles,” losing Medicaid coverage can be especially harmful as Medicaid covers critical services such as long-term care and certain home- and community-based supports.

10. Some prescription drugs will see lower prices

For the first time, Medicare will enforce negotiated prices on a group of high-cost, single-source drugs.

The initial list includes Eliquis, Enbrel, Entresto, Farxiga, Imbruvica, Januvia, Jardiance, Fiasp/NovoLog, Stelara, and Xarelto.

Savings may be modest at first because the list is short, but more drugs may follow, including Ozempic, Rybelsus, and Wegovy.

Bottom line

Although Medicare trustees’ projections haven’t always been perfect, the broader trend is clear: health care costs are going up, and retirees will need to plan for greater out-of-pocket expenses to avoid medical debt.

If you rely on Medicare, review your situation carefully, check for IRMAA exposure, and check up on your financial health if you want to continue to enjoy a stress-free retirement.

More from FinanceBuzz: