North Carolina Medicare Enrollment Deadlines 2026 — Every Date, Every Penalty | GenerationHealth Skip to main content
Medicare Deadlines · Penalty Math · NC 2026

Every Medicare Enrollment Deadline — North Carolina 2026

IEP, AEP, MA OEP, GEP, SEPs, and the 6-month Medigap window — the deadline most NC beneficiaries have never heard of and the most expensive one to miss. Every date, every penalty, every dollar amount in one place.

NC License #10447418 — Durham, NC AHIP Certified 2026 ★ 5.0 — 20 Google Reviews Penalty Check · Personal Deadline Timeline · All NC Counties 828-761-3326

Six Medicare Enrollment Deadlines — and Why Missing the Wrong One Is Permanent

Quick Answer

North Carolina Medicare beneficiaries have six enrollment windows: the Initial Enrollment Period (7 months around your 65th birthday), the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15–December 7), the Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (January 1–March 31, MA members only), the General Enrollment Period (January 1–March 31, coverage July 1, penalty applies), Special Enrollment Periods (qualifying events, year-round), and the 6-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period (starts the month you are both 65+ and enrolled in Part B).

Every other Medicare deadline has some form of workaround — the GEP, an SEP, or the next AEP. The Medigap OEP has no workaround in NC. Miss it with a health event on record and insurers can deny you, exclude pre-existing conditions, or charge $150–$200+/month more permanently. This is the deadline most people turning 65 have never heard of — and the most expensive one to miss. Call (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

6
Medicare enrollment windows — each with different rules, clocks, and consequences for missing them
10%/yr
Permanent Part B penalty per 12 months uncovered after IEP — added to your premium for life
6 months
Medigap guaranteed-issue window — the deadline most NC beneficiaries have never heard of
July 1
Earliest Part B effective date if you miss the IEP and enroll in the General Enrollment Period

All 6 Enrollment Windows — Dates, Actions, and What Happens If You Miss Each One

1
IEP
7 Months
Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)
3 months before your 65th birthday month → birthday month → 3 months after · One-time, 7-month window

The IEP is your primary window to enroll in Medicare Parts A and B. It opens 3 months before your 65th birthday month, includes your birthday month, and closes 3 months after — 7 months total. This is also the opening of your guaranteed-issue Medigap window (see deadline 6), making it the single most consequential month of your Medicare life.

When you enroll matters within the IEP. Enrolling in the first 3 months (before your birthday month) gives you Part B effective the first of your birthday month — no gap. Enrolling in your birthday month or later delays coverage by 1–3 months.

Exception for workers with employer coverage: If you have active employer group health plan (GHP) coverage from an employer with 20+ employees, you may delay Part B without penalty. Your IEP–equivalent 8-month SEP starts when that employer coverage ends — not when employment ends.

✓ What You Can Do
  • Enroll in Part A (usually $0 premium)
  • Enroll in Part B ($185/month 2026 standard premium)
  • Enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan
  • Enroll in a standalone Part D plan
  • Buy any Medigap plan with guaranteed issue — no health questions
✗ If You Miss It
  • Must wait for GEP (Jan 1–Mar 31), coverage effective July 1
  • Permanent 10% Part B penalty per 12-month delay — forever
  • Medigap OEP still opens when you eventually enroll in Part B — but delays Medigap start
  • Up to 6+ months with no Part B coverage after GEP enrollment
2
AEP
Oct 15–Dec 7
Annual Enrollment Period (AEP)
October 15 – December 7 every year · Changes effective January 1

The AEP is the primary annual window for changing Medicare Advantage and Part D coverage. Every NC Medicare beneficiary should treat AEP as an annual review obligation, not just a change option. Plans change every year. A Part D drug that was tier 2 ($12/month) on your current plan in 2025 may be tier 4 ($85+/month) on the same plan in 2026 — a $876/year cost increase you will not notice until January bills arrive.

Before every AEP: Read your Annual Notice of Change (ANOC), which plans must mail by September 30. Check your drug formulary for tier changes. Confirm your doctors and hospitals are still in-network if you have an MA plan. Call Rob for a no-cost comparison before December 7. NC License #10447418.

✓ What You Can Do
  • Join a Medicare Advantage plan (if on Original Medicare)
  • Switch MA plans
  • Drop MA and return to Original Medicare
  • Change Part D standalone plans
  • Add Part D if you did not have it
✗ If You Miss It
  • No penalty — but locked into current plan until next AEP or qualifying SEP
  • Formulary changes, network changes, premium increases all apply Jan 1
  • Stuck with tier changes on your medications for the full year
3
MA OEP
Jan 1–Mar 31
Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (MA OEP)
January 1 – March 31 every year · MA members only · One change allowed

The MA OEP is a second-chance window for people who were enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan as of January 1. If AEP ended and you enrolled in an MA plan that — once January arrives — turns out to have your doctor out-of-network, a formulary that does not cover your drugs, or higher copays than expected, the MA OEP is your correction window. One change is allowed per year.

Critical limitation: You cannot switch between two standalone Part D plans during MA OEP. This window only applies to MA enrollees. If you are on Original Medicare with a standalone Part D plan and want to switch plans in January, you need a qualifying SEP or must wait for AEP.

✓ What You Can Do (MA Members Only)
  • Switch from one MA plan to a different MA plan
  • Drop MA, return to Original Medicare, add a standalone Part D plan
✗ If You Miss It
  • No penalty — wait until AEP (Oct 15)
  • Cannot make a second MA OEP change (one per year maximum)
  • Stuck with current MA plan for the rest of the year
4
GEP
Jan–Mar
General Enrollment Period (GEP)
January 1 – March 31 every year · Coverage effective July 1 · Penalty still applies

The GEP is the fallback window for people who missed their IEP and do not qualify for an SEP. It is not a penalty-free workaround — it is a safety net with significant drawbacks. Coverage does not start until July 1, meaning you may have 3–6 months without Part B coverage after enrolling. The late enrollment penalty still applies and is calculated from the month after your IEP closed.

Dollar reality: At the 2026 standard Part B premium of $185/month, a 3-year delay before using the GEP = 30% permanent penalty = $55.50/month extra for life. Over 15 years: $9,990 in excess premiums from a single missed deadline.

✓ What You Can Do
  • Enroll in Part A and/or Part B (last-resort window)
  • Coverage effective July 1 after enrollment
✗ Consequences
  • Coverage does not start until July 1 — 3–6 month gap after enrolling
  • Permanent Part B penalty still applies from IEP close date
  • Not a penalty waiver — just access to enrollment outside IEP/SEP
5
SEP
Year-Round
Special Enrollment Periods (SEPs)
Year-round · Triggered by qualifying life events · Duration varies by event type

SEPs allow Medicare enrollment or plan changes outside of standard windows when a qualifying life event occurs. The most consequential is the employer coverage loss SEP: an 8-month window to enroll in Part B after losing active employer group health plan coverage, with no penalty — provided you enroll within 8 months of when coverage ends, not when employment ends.

Other common NC SEP triggers: moving to a county where your current plan is not available, your plan terminating its Medicare contract, gaining Extra Help/LIS eligibility for Part D, gaining or losing Medicaid, being released from incarceration, and FEMA-declared disasters (CMS activation required — used for NC counties after Hurricane Helene).

✓ Common SEP Windows
  • Employer coverage loss: 8 months, Part B / Part D / MA
  • Relocation: 2 months before – 2 months after move
  • Plan terminates: before plan end date
  • Extra Help gained: quarterly (Q1–Q3)
  • Medicaid change: 2 months
✗ If You Miss It
  • Part B: wait for GEP, July 1 coverage, permanent penalty
  • Part D: wait for AEP, permanent 1%/month penalty accumulates
  • MA: wait for AEP, no permanent penalty but plan disruption
6
Medigap OEP
6 Months
Medigap Open Enrollment Period — The Deadline Most People Never Hear About
6 months starting the first day of the month you are both 65+ AND enrolled in Part B · One-time, never repeats

The Medigap OEP is a 6-month guaranteed-issue window that opens the first day of the month you are both 65 or older and enrolled in Medicare Part B. During this window, every insurance company selling Medigap in NC must sell you any plan they offer at their standard rate — no medical underwriting, no health questions, no denial for pre-existing conditions. This is the only time in your Medicare life where your health history does not matter for Medigap.

After this window closes in NC, insurers can apply full medical underwriting. A cardiac event, cancer diagnosis, diabetes, COPD, or stroke on your record can result in denial or premium surcharges of $150–$250+/month permanently — for every year you remain on Medigap. The dollar difference between getting Plan G at 65 during the OEP versus trying to buy it at 68 after a health event is often $1,500–$2,500/year in excess premiums — permanently.

✓ During the 6-Month OEP
  • Any NC Medigap insurer must sell you any plan they offer
  • Standard rate regardless of health history
  • No medical underwriting, no health questions
  • No denial for pre-existing conditions
  • All plans available: Plan G, Plan N, Plan A, etc.
✗ After the OEP Closes in NC
  • Insurers can use full medical underwriting
  • Pre-existing conditions can result in denial
  • Approved applicants may pay $150–$250+/month more permanently
  • No guaranteed-issue rights unless specific qualifying event (very limited)
  • Cannot undo a missed OEP — this window never repeats

The Part B Penalty — Dollar Math for NC Beneficiaries

The Part B late enrollment penalty is 10% of the standard Part B premium for every 12-month period you were eligible for Part B but did not enroll and did not have qualifying employer coverage. In 2026, the standard Part B premium is $185/month. The penalty is permanent and recalculates each year when CMS adjusts the standard premium.

Part B Penalty Calculator — 2026 Standard Premium $185/month
1 Year
10%
+$18.50/mo · $222/yr
2 Years
20%
+$37.00/mo · $444/yr
3 Years
30%
+$55.50/mo · $666/yr
5 Years
50%
+$92.50/mo · $1,110/yr

Permanent means permanent: A 3-year delay adds $55.50/month to your Part B premium for life. At 20 years of retirement that is $13,320 in excess premiums from one missed deadline. The dollar amount adjusts upward each year as CMS raises the standard premium. Source: medicare.gov

The Medigap OEP — Why This Is the Most Expensive Deadline in Medicare

Every other Medicare deadline has some form of correction path. Miss the AEP? Wait for next October. Miss an MA plan change? Wait for MA OEP or next AEP. Miss the IEP? The GEP is waiting in January, and the Medigap OEP opens when you eventually enroll in Part B. The Part B and Part D penalties are permanent but calculable — you can model the cost and make a decision.

The Medigap OEP is different. It opens once, lasts 6 months, and never repeats under normal circumstances. NC does not have a birthday rule or an annual guaranteed-issue window like some other states. Once it closes, underwriting applies — and health events that seem unlikely at 65 (cardiac, cancer, neurological) become common at 68, 70, 72.

NC Medigap OEP — The Most Expensive Deadline Most People Never Hear About

Plan G at 65 With Guaranteed Issue: $130–$165/month.
Plan G at 68 After a Cardiac Event: Denied or $280–$350+/month.

During your 6-month guaranteed-issue Medigap OEP, NC law requires every Medigap insurer to sell you any plan they offer at their standard published rate — regardless of your health history. An NC resident turning 65 today can get Plan G (the most comprehensive Medigap plan, covering all cost-sharing except the $257 Part B deductible) for $130–$165/month from competitive NC carriers.

That same person at 68, after a hospitalization for atrial fibrillation or a Type 2 diabetes diagnosis, applying for Medigap outside their OEP: denied by multiple carriers, or approved at $290–$380/month with a 6-month exclusion period for cardiac conditions. The annual premium difference: $1,800–$2,600/year. Over 15 years: $27,000–$39,000 in excess Medigap premiums — from not enrolling during a 6-month window at 65.

The rule: enroll in Medigap the same month you enroll in Part B. Do not wait to “see how Medicare goes” or “decide later.” There is no later. Call (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

NC Medigap OEP Scenarios — How Health History Changes the Math

ScenarioPlan G PremiumUnderwriting?Annual Cost Diff vs. OEP
Age 65, enrolling during 6-month OEP$130–$165/moNone — guaranteed issueBaseline
Age 67, healthy, no claims$160–$210/moFull underwriting applied+$360–$1,080/yr
Age 68, Type 2 diabetes diagnosis$240–$310/mo or deniedFull underwriting; diabetes is common denial basis+$1,800–$2,160/yr or uninsurable
Age 69, atrial fibrillation history$280–$380/mo or deniedCardiac conditions often result in denial or heavy surcharge+$2,040–$2,760/yr or uninsurable
Age 70, COPD or cancer historyTypically denied in NCMost NC insurers decline applicants with active COPD or cancer historyMedigap unavailable
💡 Robert Simm — NC License #10447418

The Medigap window is the call I wish I got at 65 instead of at 67. I’ve had clients call after a health scare asking about Plan G. At 65 during their guaranteed-issue window, it was $145/month with no questions. At 67 with a new cardiac history, they were either denied outright or quoted $320+/month. That’s $2,100/year in extra premiums — forever — or no Medigap protection at all and facing Original Medicare’s unlimited 20% cost-sharing on every outpatient bill.

If you are turning 65 and enrolling in Part B: call me that same week about Medigap. The 6-month window starts the moment Part B goes active. (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

Quick Reference — When to Do What in NC Medicare

SituationAction WindowKey Deadline
Turning 65, no employer coverageIEP opens 3 months before birthday monthEnroll in Part B in first 3 months · Enroll in Medigap same month
Working past 65 with employer GHP (20+ employees)8-month SEP when employer coverage endsDo not confuse employment end with coverage end · COBRA does not extend SEP clock
Retiring mid-year, losing employer coverage8-month window from coverage end dateEnroll in Part B within 30 days ideally · Medigap OEP opens with Part B effective date
Reviewing Medicare Advantage or Part D planAEP: October 15 – December 7Read ANOC by Oct 1 · Check formulary tiers · Call (828) 761-3326 before Dec 7
Enrolled in MA in January — plan doesn’t workMA OEP: January 1 – March 31One change allowed · Can return to Original Medicare and add Part D
Moving to a new NC countyRelocation SEP: 2 months before – 2 months afterConfirm plan availability in new county · Call (828) 761-3326 immediately
Missed IEP, no SEP qualifiesGEP: January 1 – March 31Coverage effective July 1 · Permanent Part B penalty applies

Get Your Personal Deadline Timeline — Free, No Obligation

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Talk to Rob — Your Personal Deadline Calendar

Rob builds your exact enrollment timeline based on your birthday, current coverage, and situation — IEP dates, Medigap OEP window, SEP eligibility, and AEP review. NC License #10447418. Same agent every call.

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Personal Deadline Calendar

Rob maps your exact IEP window, Medigap OEP opening date, and SEP eligibility based on your specific birthday and current coverage situation. Not a generic checklist — your dates, your situation. NC License #10447418.

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Penalty Math Before You Decide

(828) 761-3326. Before any enrollment decision, Rob calculates the permanent penalty dollar amount for your specific delay scenario so you know exactly what a timing mistake costs — not a percentage, but the monthly dollar amount added to your premium forever.

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Medigap OEP Specialists

The Medigap guaranteed-issue window is Rob’s first conversation with every client turning 65. All NC Medigap carriers compared during your OEP, rated and ranked by premium, financial strength, and rate-increase history. NC License #10447418.

Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Medicare enrollment deadlines in North Carolina for 2026.
What are the Medicare enrollment deadlines in North Carolina for 2026?

NC has six Medicare enrollment windows: IEP (7 months around your 65th birthday), AEP (Oct 15–Dec 7), MA OEP (Jan 1–Mar 31, MA members only), GEP (Jan 1–Mar 31, coverage July 1, penalty applies), SEPs (qualifying events year-round), and the 6-month Medigap OEP (starts when you are both 65+ and enrolled in Part B). The Medigap OEP is the most expensive deadline to miss — it never repeats and NC has no birthday rule. Call (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

What is the Medicare Annual Enrollment Period in NC?

The AEP runs October 15–December 7 every year. Changes take effect January 1. During AEP you can join, switch, or drop a Medicare Advantage plan; change Part D plans; or switch between Original Medicare and MA. Read your Annual Notice of Change (ANOC) each September before AEP — a drug moving from tier 2 ($12/mo) to tier 4 ($85+/mo) costs $876/year you will not notice until January. Call (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

What is the Part B late enrollment penalty in NC?

10% of the standard Part B premium for every 12 months you could have enrolled but did not, without qualifying employer coverage. In 2026: $185/month standard premium. 2-year delay = 20% = $37/month extra permanently. 3-year delay = 30% = $55.50/month extra forever. The dollar amount grows as CMS raises the standard premium annually. Call (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

What is the Medigap open enrollment period in North Carolina?

A 6-month guaranteed-issue window that begins the first day of the month you are both 65+ and enrolled in Part B. During this window, every NC Medigap insurer must sell you any plan at their standard rate — no health questions, no underwriting, no denials. After this window closes, NC insurers can use medical underwriting. A cardiac history, diabetes, or COPD diagnosis can result in denial or $150–$250+/month premium surcharges permanently. This window never repeats. NC has no birthday rule. Call (828) 761-3326.

What happens if you miss the Medicare Initial Enrollment Period?

Two consequences: (1) You must wait for the GEP (January 1–March 31), with Part B coverage not starting until July 1 — potentially 6+ months without coverage; (2) A permanent 10% per year Part B penalty is added to your premium for life. At the 2026 standard premium of $185/month, a 2-year delay = $37/month extra permanently = $444/year. Over 15 years: $6,660 from a single timing mistake. The Medigap OEP opens when you do eventually enroll in Part B. Call (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

When should I enroll in Medicare if I’m still working at 65 in NC?

If you have active employer group health plan (GHP) coverage from an employer with 20+ employees, you may delay Part B without penalty. Enroll in Part A at 65 (usually $0 premium, no penalty). Your 8-month Part B SEP starts when employer GHP coverage ends — not when employment ends. COBRA does not restart this clock. When you do enroll in Part B, your 6-month Medigap guaranteed-issue OEP begins — enroll in Medigap that same month. Call (828) 761-3326. NC License #10447418.

Robert Simm — Licensed Independent Medicare Broker

NC License #10447418 · NPN #10447418 · AHIP Certified 2026 · Independent · Durham, NC

12+ Years · 500+ NC Clients · 2731 Meridian Pkwy, Durham, NC 27713

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 · 20 Google Reviews

About the Author

Robert Simm is a licensed, independent health insurance advisor and founder of GenerationHealth.me, based in Durham, NC. AHIP Certified 2026, NC License #10447418. The Medigap OEP conversation is the first call Rob has with every client turning 65 — because it is the one deadline that, once missed, cannot be corrected. Verify his license at NCDOI.gov.

NC Insurance License #10447418 · NPN #10447418 · AHIP Certified 2026 · Verify at NCDOI.gov ↗

This guide provides educational information about Medicare enrollment deadlines and is not legal or financial advice. Enrollment windows, penalty calculations, and premium amounts are based on CMS guidelines current as of March 2026 and are subject to change. Medigap underwriting rules reflect NC NCDOI regulations as of 2026. Individual situations vary. Always confirm your specific enrollment window and eligibility with a licensed Medicare broker or Social Security. GenerationHealth.me and Robert Simm are independent and not affiliated with CMS, Medicare, SSA, NCDOI, or any insurance carrier. Sources: medicare.gov · cms.gov · ncdoi.gov

Last Updated: March 7, 2026  |  Reviewed By: Robert Simm, NC License #10447418  |  Next Review: October 2026
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