How long do I have to pay Medicare Part B penalties once they start in North Carolina? | GenerationHealth.me
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Medicare · North Carolina · 2026

How long do I have to pay Medicare Part B penalties once they start in North Carolina?

Real numbers. Real North Carolina context. Answered by a licensed NC broker, not a chatbot.

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Direct answer — North Carolina · 2026
The Medicare Part B late enrollment penalty is 10% of the standard premium for every 12 full months you delayed enrollment without qualifying employer coverage. With the 2026 standard Part B premium at $202.90/mo, a 3-year delay = a 30% penalty = an extra $60.87/mo for the rest of your life. The Part D late enrollment penalty is 1% of the national base premium for each month you delayed.
THE BROKER'S ANSWER
Once the 10% Medicare Part B late enrollment penalty kicks in, it will last for the rest of your life. While there are a couple of ways to offset this penalty, it is advisable to talk to a licensed health insurance broker in your area or call Medicare directly at 1-800-MEDICARE.
— Rob Simm, Licensed NC Medicare Broker · (828) 761-3326

What does the data actually show for this Medicare question?

Years delayedSurcharge2026 Part B with penaltyLifetime extra cost (vs. 20-year retiree)
1 year+10%$223.19/mo~$4,870
2 years+20%$243.48/mo~$9,740
3 years+30%$263.77/mo~$14,610
5 years+50%$304.35/mo~$24,350
10 years+100%$405.80/mo~$48,700

Based on 2026 standard Part B premium of $202.90/mo. Penalty stacks for the rest of your life.

What are the 2026 Medicare numbers for North Carolina residents?

$202.90
Part B premium per month
2026 standard rate. Higher with IRMAA based on income.
$283
Part B annual deductible
You pay this before Medicare covers 80% of outpatient care.
$9,350
MA in-network out-of-pocket max
2026 cap on in-network Medicare Advantage spending.
$2,100
Part D out-of-pocket cap
No more catastrophic Rx costs in 2026 — but tier placement still matters.
10 minutes.
You'll know where you stand.
Rob Simm · Licensed NC Medicare Broker · NPN #10447418
Prefer to just talk?
(828) 761-3326
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Snap a photo of your meds and providers — no typing
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5 mistakes North Carolina residents make
Avoid these before you enroll.

All five apply to every NC resident regardless of county. Each one is fixable — if you catch it before enrollment.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-13 · Robert Simm, Licensed NC Medicare Broker, NPN #10447418
⚠ NC-wide Medicare mistakes I see every AEP
Mistake 01 NC-wide
Picking an MA plan without verifying your specific hospital’s contract — not just the system name.
Why it hurts“Duke Health” covers Duke University Hospital, Duke Regional, Duke Raleigh, and dozens of clinics — and Medicare Advantage carrier contracts can include some of those facilities and exclude others. NC residents enroll in plans that list “Duke Health” in-network, then discover at admission that Duke Raleigh isn’t actually contracted under their plan. The same problem hits UNC Health (main campus vs. Hillsborough vs. Rex), WakeMed, Atrium Health, and Novant.
What to doBefore enrolling, give the carrier the exact facility name and address — not just the system name — and ask them to confirm in-network status in writing. An independent NC broker can run that verification across every carrier in 10 minutes.
Mistake 02 NC-wide
Enrolling through a national call center that doesn’t know NC carrier contracts.
Why it hurtsNational 1-800 services are not licensed at the carrier-contract level for North Carolina. They sell whichever plan their script pays them most for, regardless of whether it actually contracts with Duke, UNC, WakeMed, or Atrium. NC residents end up with plans that look fine in the federal directory but fall apart on first claim because the carrier-to-system contract was never verified.
What to doUse a North Carolina–licensed broker (NC #10447418) who has NC-specific carrier contract data — and whose phone you can call again next March when something goes wrong.
Mistake 03 NC-wide
Missing the Part B late enrollment penalty if you’re working past 65.
Why it hurtsIf you don’t sign up for Part B during your Initial Enrollment Period and don’t have qualifying employer coverage, you owe a 10% penalty for every 12 months you delayed — for the rest of your life. A 3-year delay = 30% higher Part B premium forever.
What to doIf you’re working past 65, get a Certification of Creditable Coverage from HR before you stop work. That document protects you from the penalty.
Mistake 04 NC-wide
Missing your 6-month Medigap open enrollment window.
Why it hurtsYou have one 6-month window after you turn 65 and enroll in Part B to buy any Medigap plan with no medical underwriting. Miss it and NC insurers can deny you coverage — or charge dramatically more — if you develop a health condition. This is the single most expensive mistake I prevent.
What to doUnderstand your window the day you turn 65. Even if you pick MA now, know the Medigap door closes 6 months later. Call me before that window closes.
Mistake 05 NC-wide
Assuming Part D plans are stable — when formularies and tier placement change every January.
Why it hurtsThe Part D plan that put your medication on Tier 2 last year can move it to Tier 4 (specialty) this year. NC residents who don’t re-shop Part D every AEP routinely watch a $15/mo prescription become $180/mo overnight. The plan didn’t notify you in plain language; the change was buried in the Annual Notice of Change you didn’t open.
What to doRe-run the Part D math every AEP (Oct 15–Dec 7) — every year. An NC broker can pre-check your full medication list against every plan in your zip code and flag any tier moves before they cost you. Same broker, every year, takes 30 minutes.

What's the difference between doing it alone and working with an independent NC broker?

What you needDoing it aloneRobert Simm — NC #10447418
Plans you can compareWhatever Medicare.gov lists, no NC contextEvery major NC carrier, filtered to your situation
North Carolina network knowledgeGeneric federal directories, often 6 months staleDirect contract verification with each carrier
2026 numbers applied to your budgetGeneric rules — no IRMAA math, no spousal coordinationRun with your real income and household
Part D formulary checkManual entry per drug, per planI pre-check every prescription on every eligible plan
Same person next yearDifferent agent every callSame broker, same answer, every AEP
Cost$0 (just your time and risk)$0 — paid by carrier
⚠ Penalty & Deadline Warning
If you delay Medicare Part B without creditable employer coverage, you’ll pay a 10% lifetime penalty for every 12 months you delayed — added to your Part B premium for the rest of your life. The 2026 standard Part B premium is $202.90/month, so a 24-month delay raises it to roughly $243/month, permanently. Your Initial Enrollment Period is a 7-month window: 3 months before your 65th birthday month, the birthday month itself, and 3 months after.
💡 Broker Tip · Provider Verification
Before you enroll in any Medicare Advantage plan, give me the names of every doctor you see — primary care, cardiologist, oncologist, endocrinologist — and I’ll call each one’s billing office directly to verify they accept the plan. Provider directories on Medicare.gov run 4–6 months stale, and “in-network” on the directory doesn’t always mean the provider is accepting new patients on that plan.

Frequently asked questions

Does this answer vary by NC county?
Yes — carrier networks, Medigap rates, and Medicare Advantage plan availability all vary by NC county and zip code. The figures on this page reflect the NC-wide range; a county-specific quote will be tighter.
How do I verify any Medicare agent is licensed in NC?
Go to sbs.naic.org/solar-external-lookup, select North Carolina, and search by name. Robert Simm’s NC license number is #10447418.
Is there a fee to talk to a Medicare broker?
No. Brokers are paid by the insurance carrier when you enroll, and the commission is identical whether you enroll directly, through Medicare.gov, or through a broker.
What happens after I call?
A 10-minute conversation to understand your doctors, medications, and budget. No pressure, no SSN required, no commitment to enroll. You can call (828) 761-3326 or book at calendly.com/robert-generationhealth/new-meeting.
Where is Robert Simm based?
Robert Simm operates from 2731 Meridian Pkwy, Durham NC 27713, and serves clients across North Carolina by phone, video, or in-home visits in the Triangle and surrounding counties.

Does it matter which Medicare carrier you choose?

It doesn’t — because I get paid by the insurance carrier to manage your plan. Most call centers get paid more to steer your business toward certain carriers based on volume and contracts. The only thing I’m optimizing for is making sure you’re covered correctly when you actually need it. That’s what keeps people coming back. And referring their neighbors.

Get help anywhere in North Carolina
Compliance disclaimer: We do not offer every plan available in your area. Please contact Medicare.gov or 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) for information on all of your options. GenerationHealth.me and Robert Simm are independent agents not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. government or the federal Medicare program. This is a solicitation of insurance. A licensed agent may contact you. Information on this page is for educational purposes only and should not be considered legal or financial advice. Plan availability, premiums, and benefits vary by location and carrier.
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