Where Your Medicare Dollars Actually Go
Before you can lower costs, you need to know where the money is going. In 2026, a typical NC Medicare beneficiary pays across three buckets: premiums (Part B at $202.90/month, plus any MA, Medigap, or Part D premiums), out-of-pocket costs (deductibles, copays, and coinsurance when you use care), and prescription drug costs (driven by your formulary tier, pharmacy choice, and whether you've hit the $2,100 annual cap).
Most people focus on lowering premiums. But the biggest savings often come from reducing out-of-pocket exposure and drug costs β the parts of Medicare that punish you when you actually use care. This guide covers every lever you can pull, starting with the ones that save the most.
For all 2026 cost numbers, see our Medicare Costs NC 2026 guide. For OOP specifics, see our OOP costs NC guide.
The single highest-impact move I see every year: clients who qualify for a Medicare Savings Program and don't know it. QMB alone can save $2,435/year in Part B premiums β plus it eliminates deductibles and coinsurance. I check eligibility for every client. It takes 5 minutes.
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π Call Now π¬ Text Us π Book an AppointmentStrategy 1: Check Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs)
Medicare Savings Programs are state-administered programs that pay part or all of your Part B premium β and in some cases, eliminate deductibles and coinsurance too. Many NC residents qualify and don't know it. Apply through your county Department of Social Services.
- QMB (Qualified Medicare Beneficiary): Pays your entire Part B premium ($202.90/month = $2,435/year), plus covers Part A and Part B deductibles and coinsurance. Income limit: roughly 100% of Federal Poverty Level.
- SLMB (Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary): Pays Part B premium only. Income limit: roughly 120% of FPL.
- QI (Qualifying Individual): Pays Part B premium only. Income limit: roughly 135% of FPL. First-come, first-served funding each quarter.
Potential savings: $2,435/year in Part B premiums alone (QMB saves even more by eliminating cost-sharing).
Strategy 2: Apply for Extra Help (Low-Income Subsidy)
Extra Help reduces Part D premiums, deductibles, and copays. If you qualify, your drug costs drop dramatically β often to $0 premiums and $1.55β$4.50 per fill. Income thresholds are higher than most people expect, and asset limits are generous.
Apply through Social Security (ssa.gov or your local office). If you qualify for QMB, SLMB, or QI, you automatically qualify for Extra Help. For more on Part D cost details, see our Part D costs NC guide.
Potential savings: $1,000β$4,000+/year in drug costs depending on your medications.
Strategy 3: Appeal Your IRMAA Surcharge
If your Part B or Part D premiums are higher because of IRMAA (Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount), you may be able to appeal. IRMAA is based on your tax return from two years ago β but if your income has dropped since then due to retirement, job loss, divorce, or the death of a spouse, you can request a recalculation.
File Form SSA-44 with Social Security within 60 days of receiving your IRMAA notice. If approved, your premiums drop to match your current (lower) income. IRMAA kicks in at $109,000 (single) or $218,000 (joint). For full IRMAA brackets, see our Part B premium NC guide.
Potential savings: $1,000β$5,800+/year depending on your income bracket.
Your 2026 Part B premium is based on your 2024 tax return. If you retired in 2025 and your income dropped significantly, you're still paying the higher premium unless you file an appeal. Don't wait β call Social Security or file SSA-44 as soon as you have documentation of the change.
Strategy 4: Optimize Your Drug Plan Every Year
Plan formularies, tier placements, and preferred pharmacy lists change every January. A drug that was Tier 1 this year may be Tier 3 next year on the same plan β costing you hundreds more without any change on your end.
- Run your medication list: Enter every drug into a comparison tool or have a broker run it for you. Compare total annual cost (premium + deductible + copays), not just premium.
- Ask about generic alternatives: Moving one medication from Tier 3 to Tier 1 can save $500+/year.
- Check the $2,100 cap: If you're going to hit the OOP cap regardless, the plan with the lowest premium and deductible is your best bet β copays don't matter after $2,100.
For formulary tiers and Part D plan mechanics, see our Part D in NC guide.
Potential savings: $300β$2,000+/year by switching to a better-fitting drug plan.
Strategy 5: Use Preferred Pharmacies
Most Part D and MA plans have a "preferred" pharmacy list where copays are significantly lower. Filling the same drug on the same plan at a non-preferred pharmacy costs 30β50% more per fill.
In NC, commonly preferred pharmacies include CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Harris Teeter, and Publix β but the list varies by plan. Check your plan's pharmacy directory before filling prescriptions.
Potential savings: $300β$600/year on monthly prescriptions.
Strategy 6: Consider a Part B Giveback Plan
Some Medicare Advantage plans return a portion of your Part B premium β typically $50β$100/month β reducing your Social Security deduction. This effectively lowers your monthly Medicare cost without changing your coverage.
Giveback amounts vary by plan, county, and year. Not every county has giveback plans available. For MA plan details, see our how to compare MA plans in NC guide.
Potential savings: $600β$1,200/year in reduced Part B premium deduction.
Strategy 7: Choose the Right Plan Type for Your Health
The most expensive mistake in Medicare isn't picking the wrong plan β it's picking the wrong type of plan. Light healthcare users save thousands on Medicare Advantage. Heavy users save thousands on Medigap. Running the math for both scenarios is the most important comparison you can make.
For a side-by-side cost analysis, see our MA vs Medigap cost comparison. For Plan G vs Plan N specifics, see our Plan G vs Plan N comparison.
Potential Annual Savings by Strategy
Estimated savings range for NC beneficiaries in 2026
Note: Savings estimates are illustrative ranges based on 2026 CMS numbers. Actual savings depend on your income, medications, and current coverage. Call 828-761-3324 for a personalized analysis.
Strategy 8: Review Coverage Every Fall
Plans change networks, formularies, copay structures, and extra benefits every year. The Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 β December 7) is your window to switch. Even if you're happy with your current plan, run the comparison β a plan that was the best fit last year may not be the best fit this year.
For enrollment windows and deadlines, see our NC enrollment deadline guide.
Get Help in Your NC County
For the complete Medicare overview, see our Medicare in NC Complete Guide for 2026. For personalized help, talk with a local NC Medicare agent or get free Medicare quotes in NC.
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