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Can You Have Medicare and Employer Insurance?

Can You Have Medicare and Employer Insurance?

If you’re 65 or older and still workingโ€”or your spouse isโ€”you can absolutely have both Medicare and employer-based health insurance. In fact, combining them can often be a smart move.

What’s Inside

Employer Size Matters

  • Large employers (20+ employees): Your employer plan pays first, and Medicare covers what’s left. This means you can delay Medicare Partโ€ฏB enrollment without penalty while you’re working.
  • Small employers (<20 employees): Medicare becomes the primary payer, so you’ll generally need to enroll in both Partโ€ฏA and Partโ€ฏB to avoid coverage gaps or denial of claims.

Coverage Coordination

In Medicare terms, the total bill is shared between:

  1. Primary payer (who pays first, up to its coverage limits)
  2. Secondary payer (who covers remaining costs, if any)

Largeโ€‘employer insurance usually covers first, with Medicare topping off. Small employers flip that order.

Enrollment Timing & Penalties

Your Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) begins 3 months before your 65th birthday and ends 3 months after.โ€ฏ

  • Large employer plans: Delay Partโ€ฏB enrollment until work endsโ€”no penalties. But enroll in Part A (usually premiumโ€‘free) during your IEP.ย 
  • Small employer plans: You must sign up for both Parts A & B during your IEP to avoid late penalties.

If you miss the IEP, you may qualify for a Special Enrollment Period (SEP) lasting up to 8 months after leaving job-based coverage. Enrollment during SEP avoids penalties.

Employer Drug & Health Savings Account (HSA) Considerations

  • Employer drug coverage: If it’s at least as good as Medicare Partโ€ฏDโ€”called creditable coverageโ€”you can delay Partโ€ฏD enrollment without penaltyโ€ฏmedicare.gov+15go.cms.gov+15ehealthinsurance.com+15.
  • HSAs: If you contribute to an HSA, you must stop contributions 6 months before activating Medicare to avoid tax consequences.

Retiree Coverage & COBRA

  • Retiree insurance typically behaves like large-employer insuranceโ€”Medicare pays second and youโ€™ll still need both Parts A & B.
  • COBRA after leaving work: Medicare becomes primaryโ€”unless you have ESRD, in which case COBRA remains primary for the first 30 months.
QuestionWhy It Matters
Who pays first?Company size determines if Medicare or your employer health plan is primary
Do you have creditable drug coverage?Avoid Partโ€ฏD penalties by delaying if your plan qualifies
Are you contributing to an HSA?Stop 6 months before Medicare to avoid taxes
When does employer coverage end?Acts as a SEP trigger for Medicare enrollment
Do you plan to retire soon?Part A is often premium-free, so enrolling early may offer extra coverage at no cost

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In a Nutshell

Yesโ€”you can have both Medicare and employer insurance.
โœ”๏ธ If you’re with a large employer: enroll in Partโ€ฏA at 65, delay Partโ€ฏB while working, then enroll during your SEP when coverage ends.
โœ”๏ธ If you work for a small employer: enroll in both Parts A & B during your IEP.
Avoid Medicare penalties by understanding your employerโ€™s size, coverage quality, and enrollment windows.

Have a question specific to your situation? A State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) counselor or your employer benefits officer can guide you.
๐Ÿ“ž Need one-on-one help? Our local experts are here to guide you through every step.
๐Ÿ‘‰ Visit SecureSafer.com or call (646) 444-2020

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