Medicare Prescription Drug Guidance

Medicare Part D: Prescription Drug Coverage Explained

Medicare Part D is prescription drug coverage offered through private companies approved by Medicare. The right plan depends on your prescriptions, dosages, pharmacy preferences, formulary coverage, drug tiers, premiums, deductibles, copays, coinsurance, and eligibility for Extra Help.

Mike helps Medicare beneficiaries across Celina, Prosper, Frisco, McKinney, Little Elm, Aubrey, Anna, Melissa, and North Texas compare prescription drug plans based on their medications, pharmacies, and estimated annual costs—not just the monthly premium.

Independent local agent14 years of insurance-industry experienceDirect help before and after enrollment

2026 at a glance

2026 Medicare Part D Quick Facts

Maximum deductible

$615

No Medicare drug plan may have a deductible higher than $615 in 2026. Some plans have a lower deductible or no deductible.

Covered-drug out-of-pocket cap

$2,100

After qualifying out-of-pocket spending for covered Part D drugs reaches the cap, the beneficiary generally owes no additional cost for covered Part D drugs for the rest of the calendar year.

Plan premiums

Vary by plan

Premiums vary by plan, location, coverage, and available assistance.

Formularies and pharmacies

Plan-specific

Each plan has its own covered-drug list, tiers, pharmacy network, and cost-sharing rules.

Annual review

Recommended

Plans can change formularies, costs, pharmacies, and coverage rules each year.

2026 figures may change in future calendar years. Plan details, covered drugs, and costs vary.

The basics

What Is Medicare Part D?

Part D helps cover outpatient prescription drugs through private companies approved by Medicare. It is available as a stand-alone Prescription Drug Plan for people using Original Medicare, and drug coverage is included in many Medicare Advantage plans. Part D is optional, but delaying without other creditable drug coverage may lead to a penalty. No Part D plan covers every medication.

Covered-drug lists

What Is a Medicare Part D Formulary?

A formulary is a plan’s list of covered prescription drugs. Plans organize drugs into tiers that may have different copays or coinsurance. A drug’s tier can vary between plans, and generic and brand-name alternatives may be handled differently. Formularies may change under Medicare rules, and coverage restrictions may apply.

Common tier terms

  • Preferred generic
  • Generic
  • Preferred brand
  • Non-preferred drug
  • Specialty tier

Not every plan uses identical tier names or structures. Confirm details with the plan.

Coverage rules

What Do Prior Authorization, Step Therapy, and Quantity Limits Mean?

Prior authorization

The prescriber or beneficiary may need approval before the plan covers a medication.

Step therapy

The plan may require trying another covered medication before covering a more expensive or different drug.

Quantity limits

The plan may limit the amount of a medication covered during a specific period.

Exceptions or appeals may sometimes be requested under plan and Medicare rules. Discuss medical decisions with your prescriber.

Pharmacy networks

Why Your Pharmacy Choice Matters

Costs may differ among preferred and standard network pharmacies. Out-of-network coverage may be limited except in qualifying circumstances, and mail-order options may be available. A preferred pharmacy is not automatically cheapest for every medication. Participation may change, so confirm pharmacies directly with the plan.

Preferred network pharmacy

  • May offer lower negotiated cost sharing
  • Must be confirmed for the selected plan

Standard network pharmacy

  • Covered by the plan
  • Costs may be higher than at preferred pharmacies

Out-of-network pharmacy

  • Coverage may be limited
  • You may pay more
  • Special circumstances may apply

The full cost

What Can Medicare Part D Cost?

Costs can include a monthly premium, possible Part D IRMAA, a deductible, copays, coinsurance, tier-specific and pharmacy-specific costs, noncovered-drug costs, and covered-drug spending before the annual cap. The lowest-premium plan is not necessarily the lowest-cost plan once prescriptions, dosages, formularies, tiers, and pharmacies are considered.

1Monthly Premium
2Possible Deductible
3Copays or Coinsurance
4$2,100 Covered-Drug Out-of-Pocket Cap in 2026

The premium, deductible, copays, coinsurance, drug coverage, and pharmacy costs vary by plan. The $2,100 cap applies to qualifying out-of-pocket spending on covered Part D drugs, not monthly premiums or uncovered medications.

PremiumPossible IRMAADeductibleCopaysCoinsurancePharmacy costs

Income-Related Adjustment

Why Might Your Medicare Part D Cost Be Higher?

Higher-income Medicare beneficiaries may owe a Part D Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount, commonly called Part D IRMAA. It is paid in addition to the selected drug plan’s monthly premium. Social Security generally determines the adjustment using tax-return information supplied by the IRS, usually from two years earlier. Filing status and modified adjusted gross income may affect the adjustment, and the amount may change each year.

A qualifying life-changing event may allow someone to request reconsideration. Possible examples may include marriage, divorce or annulment, death of a spouse, work stoppage or reduction, loss of certain income-producing property, loss of pension income, or certain employer settlement changes. Eligibility and documentation should be confirmed with Social Security.

This is general educational information, not tax, legal, or Social Security advice. Social Security—not the drug-plan carrier or insurance agent—determines the adjustment.

2026 covered-drug protection

How the 2026 Part D Out-of-Pocket Cap Works

$2,100
  • The cap applies to qualifying out-of-pocket spending on covered Part D drugs.
  • After reaching it, a beneficiary generally pays nothing for covered Part D drugs for the rest of that calendar year.
  • The cap resets with the new calendar year.
  • Monthly premiums do not count.
  • Spending on drugs not covered by the plan generally does not count.
  • Certain payments made on a beneficiary’s behalf may count under Medicare rules.

Managing when you pay

What Is the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan?

Part D plans must offer an option that lets beneficiaries spread qualifying out-of-pocket prescription costs across monthly bills during the calendar year. It changes when costs are paid, not the total amount owed. Enrollment and billing rules apply.

Original Medicare

How Part D Works With Medicare Supplement

Modern Medicare Supplement policies generally do not include outpatient prescription drug coverage. Someone using Original Medicare with a supplement generally needs a separate Part D plan. The supplement and Part D carriers may differ, with separate premiums and documents. Compare drug coverage using prescriptions and pharmacies, not only the supplement company.

Explore Medicare Supplements →

Private plan alternative

How Drug Coverage Works With Medicare Advantage

Many Medicare Advantage plans include Part D, but formularies, pharmacies, tiers, and costs vary. Some do not include drug coverage. Joining a stand-alone Part D plan while enrolled in certain Medicare Advantage plans may affect that enrollment, so review the consequences before submitting an application.

Compare coverage approaches →

Avoiding coverage gaps

What Is Creditable Drug Coverage?

Creditable prescription coverage is expected to pay, on average, at least as much as standard Medicare drug coverage. Employer and union plans generally provide a notice; keep each notice. Creditable medical coverage and creditable prescription coverage are separate questions, and status can change. Confirm it with the employer or plan administrator.

Enrollment timing

What Is the Medicare Part D Late Enrollment Penalty?

A penalty may apply after a continuous period of 63 days or more without Part D or other creditable drug coverage after eligibility. It is generally based on the number of uncovered months, added to the drug-plan premium, and may continue while the person has Part D. The amount can change with Medicare’s national base beneficiary premium. Extra Help may eliminate the penalty while a person qualifies. Medicare or the plan determines the specific amount.

Employer coverage

Working Past 65 With Employer Drug Coverage

You may be able to delay Part D with creditable prescription coverage. Review medical and drug coverage separately, keep the creditable-coverage notice, and address Part D timing promptly when coverage ends. COBRA, retiree coverage, and active employer coverage can follow different rules. Do not assume medical coverage means drug coverage is creditable.

Review the Turning 65 timeline →

A practical comparison

How Should You Compare Medicare Part D Plans?

1

List every prescription

Record exact name, dosage, quantity, and frequency.

2

List preferred pharmacies

Include local, chain, independent, and mail-order preferences.

3

Check the formulary

Verify coverage and the applicable tier.

4

Review restrictions

Check prior authorization, step therapy, and quantity limits.

5

Compare estimated annual cost

Consider premium, deductible, copays, coinsurance, and pharmacy costs.

6

Review quality and service

Consider plan details and support without assuming one rating guarantees the experience.

Schedule My Prescription Drug Review

Annual changes

Why Review Part D Every Year?

Formularies, drug tiers, pharmacy networks, preferred pharmacies, premiums, deductibles, copays, and coinsurance can change. Your prescriptions can change too. A plan that fits this year may not be the lowest-cost or best-fitting option next year. Reviewing does not require changing plans.

Helpful preparation

What Information Should You Have Ready?

Medicare effective datesExact prescriptions, dosages, quantities, and frequencyPreferred pharmaciesCurrent planEmployer or union coverage and creditable noticeMedicaid or Extra Help eligibilityDoctors when relevant to an Advantage comparisonZIP code and county

Watch for these details

Common Medicare Part D Mistakes to Avoid

Choosing based only on premium

Assuming every plan covers the same drugs

Entering the wrong dosage or quantity

Ignoring preferred-pharmacy differences

Assuming no prescriptions means Part D is unnecessary

Losing creditable-coverage notices

Waiting more than 63 days after creditable coverage ends

Assuming a Medicare Supplement includes drug coverage

Adding stand-alone Part D without reviewing current Advantage enrollment

Skipping annual plan-change review

Assuming the $2,100 cap includes premiums or uncovered drugs

Mike, Your Insurance Coach

Local, direct guidance

Work Directly With Mike

Mike spent 14 years on the insurance-carrier side. Today, clients work directly with him to compare prescriptions, formularies, drug tiers, pharmacy networks, estimated annual costs, Medicare Supplement, Medicare Advantage, and enrollment timing. Support continues after enrollment.

Mike serves beneficiaries in Celina, Prosper, Frisco, McKinney, Little Elm, Aubrey, Anna, Melissa, and communities across Collin County, Denton County, and North Texas. This does not imply a physical office in every community.

Straightforward support

Compare Medicare Drug Coverage in Three Steps

1

Share Your Prescriptions and Pharmacies

Review medication names, dosages, quantities, and preferred pharmacies.

2

Compare Coverage and Estimated Costs

Review formularies, tiers, restrictions, premium, deductible, cost sharing, and estimated annual cost.

3

Choose Your Preferred Option

You make the final decision; Mike helps with enrollment and remains available afterward.

Schedule My Part D Review

Frequently asked questions

Medicare Part D FAQs

What is Medicare Part D?

It is optional Medicare prescription drug coverage offered through private plans approved by Medicare.

Is Medicare Part D required?

No, but delaying without other creditable drug coverage may lead to a late-enrollment penalty.

How much is the maximum Part D deductible in 2026?

$615. A plan may use a lower deductible or no deductible, and plan designs may treat tiers differently.

What is the 2026 Part D out-of-pocket cap?

$2,100 in qualifying out-of-pocket spending for covered Part D drugs.

Does every Part D plan have a $615 deductible?

No. $615 is the 2026 maximum; some plans have a lower deductible or none.

What is a drug formulary?

It is a plan’s list of covered prescription drugs.

What are drug tiers?

Categories plans use to organize covered medications and determine cost sharing.

What is a preferred pharmacy?

A network pharmacy that may offer lower negotiated cost sharing under a specific plan.

What is prior authorization?

A requirement to obtain plan approval before certain medications are covered.

What is step therapy?

A rule that may require trying another covered medication first.

What is a quantity limit?

A limit on the amount covered during a particular period.

Does Medicare Supplement include Part D?

Modern Medicare Supplement policies generally do not include outpatient drug coverage.

Does Medicare Advantage include Part D?

Many plans do, but some do not. Formularies and costs vary.

What is creditable prescription drug coverage?

Coverage expected to pay, on average, at least as much as standard Medicare drug coverage.

What is the 63-day Part D rule?

A continuous gap of 63 days or more without Part D or creditable drug coverage after eligibility may trigger a penalty.

What is the Part D late-enrollment penalty?

An amount generally based on uncovered months and added to a drug-plan premium. Medicare or the plan makes the determination.

Do I need Part D if I take no prescriptions?

Consider future needs, available creditable coverage, premiums, and possible penalty exposure before deciding.

What is Medicare Extra Help?

A program that helps eligible people with limited income and resources pay Part D costs.

What is the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan?

An option to spread qualifying prescription costs across monthly plan bills. It does not reduce drug costs.

Do Part D plans change every year?

They may change formularies, networks, premiums, and cost sharing each calendar year.

Can I change Part D plans?

Changes are allowed during applicable enrollment periods or special enrollment opportunities, depending on eligibility.

Does the $2,100 cap include premiums?

No. Monthly premiums generally do not count toward the covered-drug cap.

Do uncovered drugs count toward the cap?

Spending on drugs not covered by the plan generally does not count.

Can Mike help compare my prescriptions and pharmacies?

Yes. Mike can help review plan formularies, tiers, pharmacies, restrictions, and estimated costs without guaranteeing coverage.

Do you help people outside Celina and Prosper?

Yes. Mike helps beneficiaries across North Texas and can discuss service availability for your location.

Is there a cost to schedule a Medicare review?

There is no obligation to schedule. Ask Mike directly about the scope of assistance for your situation.

Are you Medicare.gov or the government?

No. Your Insurance Coach is not connected with or endorsed by the U.S. government or federal Medicare program.

What is Medicare Part D IRMAA?

Part D IRMAA is an income-related adjustment that some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries pay in addition to their Medicare drug plan premium. Social Security determines the amount using income information provided by the IRS.

Why is my Part D cost higher than the plan’s advertised premium?

The plan’s advertised premium may not include a Part D IRMAA assessed by Social Security. Your total monthly cost may include both the drug plan premium and an income-related adjustment.

Can Part D IRMAA be reconsidered?

A qualifying life-changing event may allow someone to request reconsideration from Social Security. Eligibility and documentation requirements should be confirmed directly with Social Security.

Personal Medicare drug guidance

Get Help Comparing Medicare Drug Coverage

Review prescriptions, formularies, drug tiers, pharmacies, restrictions, estimated annual costs, Extra Help, and enrollment timing based on your situation.

No pressure. No obligation. Just straightforward Medicare guidance.

We do not offer every plan available in your area. Currently, we represent a limited number of organizations that offer a limited number of products in your area. Please contact Medicare.gov, 1-800-MEDICARE, or your local State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) to get information on all of your options.

Not connected with or endorsed by the U.S. government or the federal Medicare program.