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Medicare Supplement

Best Medigap Plan for 2026: How to Choose the Right Medicare Supplement

11 min readMay 15, 2026
David Haass

Written By

David Haass
Ashlee Zareczny

Reviewed By

Ashlee Zareczny
Senior couple reviewing Medicare supplement plan options with paperwork and laptop

Key Takeaways

  • Medigap Plan G is the top choice for most new Medicare beneficiaries in 2026, covering nearly all out-of-pocket costs except the $283 Part B deductible.
  • Your 6-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period, starting when you turn 65 and enroll in Part B, is the single best time to apply, with no medical underwriting required.
  • Premiums for the same Medigap letter plan vary widely by insurer, so comparing carriers by price history and financial strength is just as important as comparing coverage.

Original Medicare covers a lot, but not everything. Hospital stays, specialist visits, and ongoing treatments can leave you with significant out-of-pocket costs that add up quickly, especially on a fixed income. That gap is exactly where a Medigap plan steps in.

A Medicare supplement plan works alongside Original Medicare Parts A and B, picking up costs like deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance. The result is more predictable expenses and fewer financial surprises. In 2026, with the Part A deductible rising to $1,736 per benefit period, having that protection matters more than ever.

Choosing the best Medigap plan comes down to understanding your health needs, your budget, and how different plans are structured. This article walks you through exactly that, clearly and without the confusion.

Medigap vs. Medicare Advantage: Choosing Your Best Medigap Plan Path

Before comparing specific Medigap plans, it helps to understand how they differ from the other major Medicare path: Medicare Advantage Plans. These are two fundamentally different approaches to covering healthcare costs.

Medigap supplements Original Medicare. You keep Parts A and B, pay a separate monthly premium to a private insurer, and that insurer covers a portion of your remaining costs. There are no provider networks — any doctor or hospital that accepts Medicare accepts your Medigap plan, anywhere in the country.

Medicare Advantage replaces Original Medicare entirely. These plans often advertise low or zero premiums, but they typically involve networks, referrals, and potentially higher costs when you need significant care.

The core tradeoff is predictability versus upfront savings. Medigap tends to cost more each month but makes your total healthcare spending far more consistent. If you travel frequently, see specialists regularly, or simply want to avoid unexpected bills, the structure of a Medicare supplement plan often makes more sense. For some, comparing your options side by side is the clearest way to decide.

Why Medigap Plan G Is the Best Medigap Plan for New Beneficiaries in 2026

Since Plan F became unavailable to beneficiaries who turned 65 after January 1, 2020, Plan G has stepped into the role of the most complete Medigap coverage option on the market. It consistently ranks as the best Medicare supplement insurance for new enrollees, and for good reason.

Here is what Plan G covers in 2026:

  • Medicare Part A hospital deductible ($1,736 per benefit period)

  • Part A coinsurance and hospital costs up to an additional 365 days after Medicare benefits are exhausted

  • Part A hospice care coinsurance or copayment

  • Medicare Part B coinsurance or copayment

  • Part B excess charges (what some doctors charge above the Medicare-approved amount)

  • Skilled nursing facility care coinsurance

  • First three pints of blood annually

  • Foreign travel emergency care (up to plan limits)

The only cost not covered is the Part B deductible of $283 in 2026. After you meet that once per year, Plan G covers 100% of Medicare-approved services. For beneficiaries who want near-total coverage without tracking copays or surprise bills, this level of protection is hard to match.

How to Choose the Best Medigap Plan: Plan G vs Plan N Compared

Plan G is not the only strong option. Plan N offers solid coverage at a lower monthly premium, but with some important cost-sharing differences worth understanding before you decide.

Coverage FeaturePlan GPlan N
Part A deductibleCoveredCovered
Part B deductible ($283)Not coveredNot covered
Part B coinsuranceCoveredCovered (with copays)
Doctor visit copayNoneUp to $20
ER visit copay (if not admitted)NoneUp to $50
Part B excess chargesCoveredNot covered
Skilled nursing facility coinsuranceCoveredCovered

The right choice depends on how often you use healthcare. If you see doctors frequently or use specialists who may charge Part B excess fees, Plan G’s higher premium can easily pay for itself. Plan N makes more financial sense if your visits are infrequent and you primarily need protection against major costs like hospitalizations.

A simple breakeven calculation helps here. Find the monthly premium difference between Plan G and Plan N in your area, then estimate your annual copay exposure under Plan N. If your projected copays exceed the premium gap, Plan G wins. If not, Plan N may be the smarter choice for your situation.

Timing Is Everything: Your Medigap Open Enrollment Window

One of the most important facts about Medigap is also one of the most commonly missed: your enrollment window is time-limited, and the stakes are high if you wait too long.

Your Medigap Open Enrollment Period lasts six months, beginning the first month you are both 65 or older and enrolled in Medicare Part B. During this window, no insurer can deny you coverage, charge you more, or impose waiting periods based on your health history. This is guaranteed issue, and it only happens once for most people.

Outside this window, insurers in most states can use medical underwriting. That means they can reject your application or charge significantly higher premiums based on pre-existing conditions. Missing your window does not make Medigap impossible, but it makes it harder and potentially more expensive.

State-Specific Enrollment Rules

Several states have special rules: California, Oregon, and Missouri have ‘birthday rules’ that allow existing policyholders to switch to an equal or lesser plan annually without health questions. Massachusetts, Minnesota, and Wisconsin have their own unique standardized Medigap plans that differ from the federal A–N system. Checking Medigap rules by state is always a smart step.

How to Find the Best Medigap Plan Price for Your Situation

Here is something many people do not realize at first: every Plan G from every insurer offers the exact same benefits. Medigap plans are federally standardized, meaning the coverage for a given letter is identical regardless of which company sells it. What differs is the price, and that difference can be substantial.

Premiums for Plan G in 2026 typically range from around $100 to $300 per month depending on your age, location, and the carrier. Three pricing methods drive those differences:

  • Community-rated: Everyone in a geographic area pays the same premium regardless of age

  • Issue-age-rated: Premium is based on your age when you first buy the plan and stays relatively stable

  • Attained-age-rated: Premium starts lower but increases as you get older, often the least predictable long-term

Beyond pricing method, look at the insurer’s financial strength rating from AM Best, their historical rate increase patterns, and their complaint ratio through the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC). A plan that is cheap today but raises rates aggressively each year can cost more over time than a slightly higher starting premium from a more stable carrier.

For seniors on a fixed income, this carrier comparison step is especially valuable. Finding the best Medigap plan is not just about the lowest premium today — it is about long-term cost stability.

Eddie the Eagle — MedicareFAQ mascot
💡 Eddie's Pro Tip

Here is what most people get wrong: they pick the cheapest Plan G they can find, and then get hit with a 15% rate increase two years later. I always tell people — look at the carrier's rate increase history before you buy. A company that has raised rates 3–4% annually for the past decade is worth paying a little more for upfront. The lowest premium today is not always the lowest cost over time. When in doubt, call us and we will pull the rate history for you.

Addressing Your Top Medigap Questions for 2026

Your Confident Path Forward: Choosing the Right Medigap Plan

Choosing the best Medigap plan comes down to three things: understanding what each plan covers, knowing when to enroll, and comparing carriers carefully — not just on price, but on long-term stability.

Plan G remains the strongest all-around choice for new beneficiaries in 2026. Plan N offers a compelling alternative if your healthcare usage is lighter and you are comfortable with modest cost-sharing. Either way, your Medigap Open Enrollment Period is the time to act — it is the one window where your health history simply does not matter.

Do not let the range of choices stall your decision. Start by reviewing your Medicare guides and resources, then compare quotes from multiple carriers. Keep in mind that Medigap plans do not include prescription drug coverage; you’ll need a separate Part D plan for that. If you want a clearer picture faster, speaking with a licensed Medicare specialist, or utilizing free counseling resources like your State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP), can save you significant time and help you choose with confidence, not guesswork.

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