The post Get Sick Overseas and Original Medicare Pays Almost Nothing. One Add-On Covers 80% appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 68-year-old retiree flies to Lisbon, slips while stepping off a tram on her third day, and suddenly finds herself facing a major medical bill. Between surgery, hospitalization, and transportation home, the costs quickly climb into the thousands of euros. Her Original Medicare card does what it does at most foreign hospitals: nothing. The bill is hers.
This article is for Medicare beneficiaries who travel outside the United States, even if it’s only an occasional trip. If you are enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan, different rules may apply, since many plans include limited worldwide emergency coverage. If international travel is not part of your plans, this is one Medicare gap you can safely ignore.
The default answer is simple: almost nothing. Part A and Part B generally do not cover care outside the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. Part D plans generally do not cover prescriptions filled outside the United States either.
The exceptions are narrow and worth knowing because many retirees assume they are broader than they are. Medicare may cover certain hospital, physician, and ambulance services in a foreign country in three limited situations:
None of those exceptions help the typical international traveler. A heart attack in Rome, a fall in Tokyo, or a stroke on a cruise ship beyond U.S. waters generally leaves the beneficiary responsible for the bill. For most overseas medical emergencies, Original Medicare provides no meaningful protection.
Six standardized Medigap plans include a foreign travel emergency benefit: Plans C, D, F, G, M, and N. Plans C and F are closed to anyone who became Medicare-eligible on or after January 1, 2020, so for most current shoppers the live options are D, G, M, and N. Plan G is by far the most popular of the four.
The benefit terms are identical across those plans and have been for years:
Run the Lisbon hip fracture through that filter. Say the foreign hospital bill is $15,000. You pay the $250 deductible, Medigap pays 80% of the remaining $14,750 (about $11,800), and you pay the other 20% (about $2,950). A $15,000 catastrophe becomes a $3,200 inconvenience. The benefit draws down your $50,000 lifetime bucket by roughly $11,800.
Three limits matter.
This is where travel medical insurance fills the gap. A short-term policy purchased for a specific trip typically offers higher emergency medical limits, dedicated medical evacuation coverage, and protection that lasts for the entire trip rather than just the first 60 days. Many policies provide evacuation benefits ranging from several hundred thousand dollars to $1 million or more, allowing transportation to an appropriate medical facility when local care is inadequate. For travelers spending meaningful time overseas, a standalone travel medical policy is often a more comprehensive solution than relying solely on Medicare-related coverage.
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The post Get Sick Overseas and Original Medicare Pays Almost Nothing. One Add-On Covers 80% appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


