How Medicare Enrollment Works in North Carolina
Medicare enrollment in North Carolina happens during specific windows: the Initial Enrollment Period (7 months around your 65th birthday), the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15βDecember 7), the Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (January 1βMarch 31), and Special Enrollment Periods triggered by qualifying life events. The 2026 Part B premium is $202.90/month. Miss the right window and you face penalties that are permanent.
Medicare enrollment isn't a one-time event β it's a system of overlapping windows, each with different rules about what you can change and when. North Carolina has over 2.1 million Medicare beneficiaries, and the plan landscape changes every year. For 2026, the standard Part B premium is $202.90/month (up from $185 in 2025), and the Part D out-of-pocket cap is $2,100.
If you'd rather talk through your specific situation, call 828-761-3326. It's free, takes about 15 minutes, and you'll leave the call knowing exactly what you need to do and when.
2026 Medicare Key Figures β North Carolina
Source: CMS.gov Β· Verify at medicare.gov before enrolling
IRMAA surcharge may apply
coinsurance kicks in
costs out-of-pocket
many NC plans set lower
The Four Medicare Enrollment Periods
Each window has different rules about who qualifies, what they can change, and what the consequences are for missing it.
Turning 65 β Initial Enrollment Period
Your 7-month IEP is centered on the month you turn 65. This is when most people first enroll in Medicare Parts A and B β and when you have guaranteed-issue Medigap rights with no medical underwriting regardless of health history.
If you're still working and covered by an employer with 20 or more employees, you can delay Part B without penalty. If your employer has fewer than 20 employees, Medicare becomes your primary insurance at 65 β enroll during your IEP to avoid permanent penalties.
Enrolling in Part B during the first 3 months of your IEP means coverage starts your birthday month. Enroll in months 4β7 and coverage is delayed by 1β3 months.
Annual Enrollment Period
The Annual Enrollment Period is open to everyone already on Medicare. During AEP you can switch from Original Medicare to Medicare Advantage (or back), change between MA plans, or join, switch, or drop a Part D drug plan.
All changes made during AEP take effect January 1 of the following year. Plans release their new 2027 details on October 1 β don't wait until the last week to review. Rob starts annual comparisons for existing clients in early October.
Note: Switching from MA to Medigap during AEP may require medical underwriting in NC unless you qualify for a guaranteed-issue SEP.
MA Open Enrollment Period
If you're already enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan, the OEP lets you make one change: switch to a different MA plan, or drop MA entirely and return to Original Medicare (which you can then pair with a Part D plan).
You cannot switch from Original Medicare to MA during OEP β that requires AEP or a qualifying SEP. You also cannot use OEP to enroll in a Medigap plan unless you qualify for guaranteed issue.
OEP is most commonly used by people who enrolled in an MA plan during AEP and quickly realized their doctors weren't as in-network as expected.
Special Enrollment Periods
SEPs allow enrollment or plan changes outside the normal windows when you experience a qualifying life event. Common SEP triggers in North Carolina include:
Losing employer coverage β 8-month SEP to enroll in Medicare Part B without penalty, starting from the date employment ends (not when COBRA ends). Moving to a new county β 60-day SEP for plan changes. Qualifying for Medicaid or Extra Help β ongoing SEP. Being released from incarceration β 2-month SEP.
SEP windows are typically 60 days. Missing a SEP window usually means waiting for the next AEP β and potentially facing a late-enrollment penalty.
If you miss your Initial Enrollment Period and don't qualify for a Special Enrollment Period, you may have to wait until the General Enrollment Period (January 1βMarch 31). Coverage won't start until July 1, and you'll pay a permanent late-enrollment penalty. Call 828-761-3326 before assuming you've missed your window β there may be an SEP that applies to your situation.
Which Situation Sounds Like Yours?
Turning 65 Soon
Your IEP starts 3 months before your birthday. This is the only time you have guaranteed-issue Medigap rights β no health questions, no underwriting. The window closes fast.
Talk to Rob about your timelineLeaving Employer Coverage
You have 8 months after employment ends to enroll in Part B without penalty. COBRA does NOT extend this window. This is one of the most misunderstood rules in Medicare.
Get your exact enrollment timelineSwitching Plans During AEP
October 15βDecember 7. Compare every MA, Medigap, and Part D plan in your NC county against your current plan. Plans change every year β so should your comparison.
Start your free plan comparisonThe single biggest mistake I see in North Carolina? People on COBRA thinking they can wait to enroll in Medicare. COBRA is not creditable coverage for Part B purposes. Your 8-month Special Enrollment Period starts when your employment ends β not when COBRA runs out. If you delay Part B while on COBRA, you will face a permanent 10% penalty for every year you waited. If you're leaving an employer, call me before your coverage ends: 828-761-3326.
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Original Medicare β Parts A & B
The federal program. Part A covers hospital stays, skilled nursing facilities, hospice, and some home health care β premium-free for most people who paid Medicare taxes for 10 or more years. The Part A deductible is $1,676 per benefit period in 2026. Part B covers doctor visits, outpatient care, preventive services, and durable medical equipment β the 2026 premium is $202.90/month with a $283 annual deductible. After the deductible, Medicare pays 80% of approved services; you pay 20% with no out-of-pocket cap. That unlimited exposure is why most people add either Medigap or Medicare Advantage.
Medicare Advantage β Part C
Private plans approved by CMS that replace Original Medicare. Most NC Medicare Advantage plans include Part D drug coverage, and many offer dental, vision, hearing, fitness benefits, and an OTC allowance. Premiums range from $0 to $150+/month on top of your Part B premium, but you're limited to a provider network and pay copays for services. The 2026 in-network out-of-pocket maximum is $9,250 β though many NC plans set their limit lower. Network verification matters enormously: a hospital can be in-network while individual physicians inside it are not. See our NC Medicare Advantage comparison guide.
Medigap β Medicare Supplement
Standardized plans (lettered A through N) that supplement Original Medicare by covering the cost-sharing that Medicare leaves behind. You keep Original Medicare and can see any Medicare-accepting doctor nationwide β no networks, no referrals. In North Carolina, Plan G and Plan N are the most popular. Plan G covers everything except the $283 Part B deductible. Plan N adds small copays for office visits ($20) and ER visits ($50) in exchange for lower premiums. Medigap premiums in NC range from $100β$250/month depending on age, county, carrier, and tobacco status. A separate Part D plan is required for drug coverage. See our Medigap Plan G vs Plan N guide.
Part D β Prescription Drug Coverage
Stand-alone drug plans that pair with Original Medicare, or drug coverage built into Medicare Advantage plans. Part D plans vary by monthly premium ($0β$80+), annual deductible (up to $590 in 2026), drug formulary, and pharmacy network. The Part D out-of-pocket cap is $2,100 in 2026 β meaning once you've spent $2,100 on covered drugs, the plan covers 100% for the rest of the year. Always run your specific medications through each plan's formulary before enrolling. See our Part D NC guide.
Original Medicare
Medicare Advantage
Late Enrollment Penalties
Medicare's late-enrollment penalties are permanent β they're added to your premium for as long as you're on Medicare. Understanding them is essential before making any enrollment decision.
Part B Late Enrollment Penalty
Example: if you delayed Part B for 2 years without creditable employer coverage, your Part B premium is permanently 20% higher. On the 2026 standard premium of $202.90, that's an extra $40.58/month β $487/year β forever.
The penalty does not apply if you were covered by a group health plan through active employment (yours or a spouse's) at an employer with 20+ employees, and you enroll within 8 months of losing that coverage.
Part D Late Enrollment Penalty
Example: if you went 18 months without creditable drug coverage, your penalty is 18% of $36.78 = $6.62/month added permanently to your Part D premium. The penalty recalculates annually based on the national base premium.
Creditable drug coverage includes most employer-sponsored drug plans, TRICARE, and VA drug benefits. COBRA drug coverage counts as creditable for Part D β this is different from Part B, where COBRA does not count.
COBRA is NOT creditable coverage for Medicare Part B. This is the most common β and most expensive β Medicare mistake Rob sees in North Carolina.
When you leave an employer, you have an 8-month Special Enrollment Period to enroll in Medicare Part B without penalty. That 8-month clock starts the day your employment ends β not the day your COBRA ends. If you elect COBRA and wait until it expires before enrolling in Medicare, you will face a permanent Part B penalty for every year you were on COBRA without Medicare.
If you are on COBRA right now and are Medicare-eligible, call 828-761-3326 immediately. Do not wait until COBRA renewal or expiration to address this.
How a Licensed NC Medicare Agent Can Help
A licensed, independent Medicare agent compares plans across every carrier in your county β for free. Agents are paid by insurance carriers, not by you, so the plan costs the same whether you enroll through an agent or on your own. What you get from an agent that you don't get from an online form:
- Enrollment timeline guidance β your exact IEP dates, SEP eligibility, and which window applies to your specific situation
- NPI-level provider verification β confirming your doctors and specialists are truly in-network, not just the hospital facility
- Prescription drug cost analysis β running your full medication list through every available plan's formulary to find the lowest total annual cost
- Side-by-side plan comparison β MA vs Medigap total annual cost scenarios using your actual doctors and drug list
- COBRA and employer coverage coordination β confirming your SEP window before your coverage lapses
- Ongoing support β annual reviews, plan changes, claims questions, and Special Enrollment Period assistance after you're enrolled
Not sure where to start? A 15-minute call to 828-761-3326 can confirm your enrollment window and save you from a permanent penalty.
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When is the Medicare enrollment period in North Carolina for 2026?
There are four enrollment windows. The Annual Enrollment Period runs October 15 through December 7 β open to all Medicare beneficiaries to switch or change plans, with changes effective January 1. Your Initial Enrollment Period is the 7-month window centered on your 65th birthday. The Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period runs January 1 through March 31 for existing MA enrollees. Special Enrollment Periods are available year-round when qualifying life events occur, such as losing employer coverage, moving counties, or qualifying for Medicaid.
How much does Medicare cost in North Carolina in 2026?
The standard Part B premium is $202.90/month. The Part B deductible is $283/year. Part A is premium-free for most people who paid Medicare taxes for 10+ years. The Part A deductible is $1,676 per benefit period. Medicare Advantage premiums in NC range from $0 to $150+/month on top of Part B. The Part D out-of-pocket cap is $2,100 in 2026. Higher-income beneficiaries pay IRMAA surcharges on Part B and Part D premiums. Source: CMS.gov.
What is the penalty for late Medicare enrollment in NC?
Part B: 10% premium surcharge for every 12-month period you were eligible but didn't enroll. Permanent β it lasts for as long as you have Medicare. Example: 2 years late = 20% added to your $202.90 premium = an extra $487/year forever. Part D: 1% of the national base beneficiary premium ($36.78 in 2026) multiplied by the number of months without creditable drug coverage. Also permanent, and recalculates annually.
Is COBRA creditable coverage for Medicare?
No β COBRA is NOT creditable coverage for Medicare Part B. This is one of the most common and costly Medicare mistakes. Your 8-month Special Enrollment Period to enroll in Part B without penalty starts the day your employment ends β not the day your COBRA ends. If you wait until COBRA expires to enroll in Medicare, you will face a permanent Part B late-enrollment penalty. Note: COBRA drug coverage does count as creditable for Part D purposes β this distinction matters. If you're on COBRA and Medicare-eligible, call 828-761-3326 before making any decisions.
Do I need to enroll in Medicare if I'm still working at 65?
It depends on your employer's size. If your employer has 20 or more employees, your employer plan is primary and Medicare is secondary β you can delay Part B without penalty while actively covered by that plan. Your 8-month SEP begins when employment or coverage ends. If your employer has fewer than 20 employees, Medicare is primary at 65 and you should enroll during your Initial Enrollment Period to avoid a permanent penalty. When in doubt, ask your employer's HR department whether Medicare is primary or secondary for people your age.
What is the difference between Medicare Advantage and Medigap in NC?
Medicare Advantage replaces Original Medicare with a private plan that typically includes drug coverage and often dental, vision, and hearing benefits. Premiums are lower ($0β$150+/month) but you're limited to a provider network, pay copays for services, and have an out-of-pocket maximum of up to $9,250 in 2026. Medigap supplements Original Medicare by covering the cost-sharing Original Medicare leaves behind. You can see any Medicare-accepting doctor nationwide with no networks. Medigap premiums are higher ($100β$250+/month) but provide near-zero out-of-pocket costs with Plan G. A broker can run both scenarios using your actual doctors and drugs to show you the real annual cost difference. See our MA vs Medigap cost comparison guide.