Turning 65? Here’s Your Medicare Roadmap
Aging into Medicare can feel overwhelming. Here’s a calm, step-by-step timeline to help you avoid penalties and make the right choice.
Your Medicare Timeline
The most important window is the 7-month Initial Enrollment Period around your 65th birthday. Here’s what to do, when.
Start Learning
Begin researching your options. If you’re still working with employer coverage, find out whether to keep it, drop it, or coordinate with Medicare. A free consultation now can save penalties later.
Initial Enrollment Period Begins
Your 7-month IEP starts. This is when you can enroll in Part A, Part B, and a Medicare plan (Advantage or Supplement + Part D). Earlier enrollment means coverage that starts the month you turn 65.
You’re Eligible
Medicare coverage can begin on the first of your birthday month if you enroll early. We’ll have your plan locked in well before this date.
IEP Closes
Your Initial Enrollment Period ends. Missing this window can trigger lifetime Part B and Part D late penalties unless you have qualifying coverage from elsewhere (like an active employer plan).
Annual Reviews
Plans change every year. We do a free annual review during the Annual Enrollment Period (Oct 15–Dec 7) to make sure your plan still fits your medications, doctors, and budget.
Common Turning-65 Situations
Still Working with Employer Coverage
If you (or your spouse) have creditable coverage from a current employer with 20+ employees, you may be able to delay Part B without penalty. We’ll help you decide whether keeping employer coverage, switching to Medicare, or coordinating both is best for your situation.
You Have an HSA
This one trips a lot of people up. Once you enroll in any part of Medicare, you can no longer contribute to a Health Savings Account. If you’re still working and contributing to an HSA, plan your Medicare timing carefully.
COBRA, Retiree Coverage, or VA
None of these count as “creditable coverage” for Part B purposes the way active employer coverage does. If you’re relying on these, you almost always need to enroll in Part B at 65 to avoid penalties.
You’re On Social Security Already
If you’re already drawing Social Security, you’ll be auto-enrolled in Part A and Part B when you turn 65. You should still review your options — auto-enrollment doesn’t mean you have the best plan for prescriptions or other benefits.
Penalties to Avoid
Part B Late Enrollment Penalty
If you don’t enroll in Part B when first eligible (and don’t have qualifying coverage), your premium increases 10% for every full 12-month period you could have had Part B but didn’t. This penalty stays with you for life.
Part D Late Enrollment Penalty
If you go more than 63 days without creditable drug coverage, you’ll owe a Part D penalty — 1% of the national base premium for every month you went without it. Also lifetime.
A 30-minute conversation now is all it takes to map out the right timing for your situation. Schedule your free consultation →
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