When to Enroll in Medicare: Every Enrollment Period Explained
Miss an enrollment window and you could face penalties or coverage gaps. Here’s every Medicare enrollment period, when it happens, and what you can do during each one.
Medicare Enrollment Periods at a Glance
Medicare has six enrollment periods, each with its own rules and deadlines. Understanding these windows is critical โ enrolling at the wrong time (or missing a window entirely) can mean coverage gaps, late-enrollment penalties that last for life, or getting locked out of the plan you want.
1. Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)
๐ When: 7-month window โ 3 months before your 65th birthday month, your birthday month, and 3 months after
๐ค Who: People turning 65
๐ What you can do: Sign up for Part A, Part B, Part D, Medicare Advantage, and/or Medigap
This is your golden window โ the most important enrollment period you’ll ever have. During the IEP:
- Medigap guaranteed issue: You have a 6-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period starting the month your Part B begins. During this time, no insurance company can deny you a Supplement plan or charge more based on health conditions.
- No late penalties: Enrolling during your IEP means you avoid lifetime Part B and Part D late-enrollment penalties.
- Widest plan selection: All available plans are open to you.
โ ๏ธ Warning: If you don’t sign up during your IEP and don’t have qualifying employer coverage, you may face a 10% Part B penalty for each 12-month period you delayed โ and this penalty lasts permanently.
2. Annual Enrollment Period (AEP)
๐ When: October 15 โ December 7 (every year)
๐ค Who: Anyone already enrolled in Medicare
๐ What you can do: Switch MA plans, switch to/from Original Medicare, change Part D plans
The AEP is your annual chance to review and adjust your Medicare coverage. Changes take effect January 1.
- Switch from one Medicare Advantage plan to another
- Drop Medicare Advantage and return to Original Medicare (+ add Medigap and Part D)
- Join a Medicare Advantage plan from Original Medicare
- Switch, join, or drop a standalone Part D plan
Important: You cannot use the AEP to buy or change a Medigap plan. Medigap enrollment follows different rules.
3. Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment (OEP)
๐ When: January 1 โ March 31 (every year)
๐ค Who: People currently enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan
๐ What you can do: Switch to a different MA plan, OR drop MA and return to Original Medicare + Part D
This is a “do-over” window for Medicare Advantage enrollees. If you made a choice during the AEP that isn’t working out โ maybe your doctor left the network or the drug formulary changed โ you can make one change during the OEP.
Note: You can only make one change during the OEP. If you drop MA, you may need medical underwriting for a Medigap plan (except in guaranteed-issue situations).
4. Special Enrollment Period (SEP)
๐ When: Triggered by a qualifying life event
๐ค Who: People experiencing specific changes
๐ What you can do: Enroll in or change Medicare coverage outside normal windows
Common qualifying events:
- Losing employer coverage โ You get 8 months after your group plan ends (or employment ends, whichever is first) to sign up for Part B without penalty
- Moving out of your plan’s service area
- Qualifying for Medicaid or Extra Help
- Your plan terminates or violates its contract
- Entering or leaving a nursing facility
5. General Enrollment Period (GEP)
๐ When: January 1 โ March 31 (every year)
๐ค Who: People who missed their IEP and don’t qualify for an SEP
๐ What you can do: Sign up for Part A and/or Part B โ coverage starts July 1
The GEP is a last resort for people who missed earlier enrollment windows. The downside: you’ll likely face late-enrollment penalties, and coverage doesn’t start until July 1 โ meaning a potential gap of months without coverage.
6. Medigap Open Enrollment Period
๐ When: 6 months starting the first month you have Part B and are 65+
๐ค Who: People newly enrolled in Part B at age 65 or older
๐ What you can do: Buy any Medigap plan with guaranteed issue (no health questions)
This is the only time you’re guaranteed to get any Medigap plan regardless of health conditions. Once this 6-month window closes, insurance companies can (and often do) deny coverage or charge higher premiums based on your health history.
๐ก NC Birthday Rule Reminder: North Carolina residents get an additional guaranteed-issue window every year โ 30 days starting on your birthday โ to switch Medigap plans without health questions. This is a rare consumer protection that most states don’t have.
Quick Reference: All Enrollment Periods
| Period | When | What You Can Do |
|---|---|---|
| IEP | 7 months around 65th birthday | Enroll in Parts A, B, C, D, Medigap |
| AEP | Oct 15 โ Dec 7 | Switch MA/Part D plans; join/leave MA |
| OEP | Jan 1 โ Mar 31 | Switch MA plans or drop MA (one change) |
| SEP | After qualifying event | Enroll/change outside normal windows |
| GEP | Jan 1 โ Mar 31 | Late sign-up for Part A/B (with penalty) |
| Medigap OEP | 6 months from Part B start at 65+ | Buy any Medigap plan (guaranteed issue) |
Not Sure When or How to Enroll?
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