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Medicare Monthly Premiums to Drop for Seniors
  • By Cara Murez HealthDay Reporter
  • Posted September 28, 2022

Medicare Monthly Premiums to Drop for Seniors

Millions of seniors who had to pay high increases in Medicare premiums this year will get a break in 2023 when they see a rare drop in monthly premiums for Medicare Part B.

The rate decrease is 3%, which will reduce what most people pay for a variety of outpatient care by $5.20 -- to $164.90 a month.

Last year, consumers faced a $21.60 monthly increase, in part because of the costs of the new controversial Alzheimer's drug Aduhelm. Since then, Medicare set limits on the drug's use and the drugmaker has cut the $56,000 price tag in half. That led to Medicare paying less than expected, the Associated Press reported.

Spending on other Medicare and Medicaid services has also been lower than expected this year. In addition to the rate decrease, the program's deductible will drop to $226 from $233.

These fee cuts come at the same time as seniors receive a Social Security cost-of-living increase for 2023 of up to 9% or 10%, the AP said.

“That's something we may never see again in the rest of our lives,” Mary Johnson, the Social Security and Medicare policy analyst for The Senior Citizens League, told the AP. “That can really be used to pay off credit cards, to restock pantries that have gotten low because people can't afford to buy as much today as they did a year ago and do some long-postponed repairs to homes and cars.”

The exact amount of the Social Security increase affecting 66 million Americans will be announced next month, the AP reported.

President Joe Biden spoke in the Rose Garden on Tuesday about the lower premiums and additional savings seniors will receive through coverage of vaccines due to the Inflation Reduction Act passed by Congress this year, the AP reported. That legislation also caps insulin copayments at $35 for Medicare recipients and eventually will lead to some lower drug prices.

“[To] millions of seniors and people with disabilities on Medicare, that means more money in their pockets while still getting the care they need,” Biden said.

More information

Here's more on the costs of Medicare coverage.

SOURCE: Associated Press

HealthDay
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