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Enrollment

Medicare Initial Enrollment Period

The Medicare Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) is a 7-month window centered around your 65th birthday during which you can first sign up for Medicare Parts A, B, C, and D. Enrolling on time avoids late enrollment penalties and ensures your coverage starts without gaps.

Last Reviewed May 12, 20266 min
David Haass

Written By

David Haass
Ashlee Zareczny

Reviewed By

Ashlee Zareczny

The Medicare Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) is a 7-month window during which you can first sign up for Medicare. It begins 3 months before the month you turn 65, includes your birthday month, and extends 3 months after. For example, if you turn 65 in August, your IEP runs from May 1 through November 30.

IEP Timeline and When Coverage Begins

When Medicare Coverage Begins Based on When You Enroll
When You EnrollCoverage Start Date

3 months before your birthday month

The month you turn 65

The month you turn 65

1 month after you enroll

1 month after your birthday month

2 months after you enroll

2 months after your birthday month

3 months after you enroll

3 months after your birthday month

3 months after you enroll

Enroll Early for the Smoothest Start

Enrolling in the 3 months before your birthday month ensures your coverage starts on the first day of your birthday month, with no gap. Waiting until your birthday month or after delays your start date.

What Can You Enroll In During Your IEP?

During your IEP, you can enroll in Medicare Part A (hospital insurance), Part B (medical insurance), a Medicare Advantage (Part C) plan, and a Medicare Part D prescription drug plan. Most people enroll in Parts A and B first, then decide between Original Medicare with a Medigap plan and Part D, or a Medicare Advantage plan.

Automatic Enrollment

You may be automatically enrolled in Medicare Parts A and B if you are already receiving Social Security or Railroad Retirement Board benefits when you turn 65. In that case, you will receive your Medicare card in the mail about 3 months before your 65th birthday. You do not need to take any action for Parts A and B, but you will still need to actively enroll in Part D or a Medicare Advantage plan if you want that coverage.

People diagnosed with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) are automatically enrolled in Medicare the month their Social Security disability benefits begin, with no waiting period. People with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) must apply for Medicare and are not automatically enrolled.

What Happens If You Miss Your IEP?

If you miss your IEP and do not have other qualifying coverage (such as employer coverage through active employment), you will face late enrollment penalties and a coverage gap. You can enroll during the General Enrollment Period (January 1 through March 31 each year), but coverage will not begin until July 1, and you may owe a Part B late enrollment penalty of 10% for each full 12-month period you were eligible but did not enroll.

IEP for Part D

Your Part D IEP runs concurrently with your Parts A and B IEP. If you do not enroll in a Part D plan or maintain other creditable drug coverage during your IEP, you may owe a Part D late enrollment penalty when you do eventually enroll. The penalty is 1% of the national base premium for each month you lacked coverage, and it is permanent.

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