2020 Medicare Advantage rates to drop 23 percent

The agency projects that 24.4 million people with Medicare will enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan for 2020 – an all-time high.

The premium declines for both programs are a result of several actions that CMS has taken over the last two years “to protect and strengthen the Medicare Advantage and Part D programs.

The average monthly premium for a Medicare Advantage plan is set to be the lowest in the last 13 years – at the same time plan choices, benefits and enrollment will continue to increase, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

In 2020, the Medicare Advantage average monthly plan premium will drop to an estimated $23 – 14 percent lower than the $26.87 average in 2019 and the lowest average since 2007, the CMS reports. Since 2017, the average monthly plan premium has fallen by an estimated 27.9 percent.

The agency projects that 24.4 million people with Medicare will enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan for 2020 – an all-time high. Currently there are 22.2 million Medicare Advantage beneficiaries out of approximately 60 million people currently enrolled in Medicare. Enrollment in Medicare Advantage in 2020 is expected to have risen by 30.6 percent since 2017.

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Beneficiaries will have more plan choices, with about 1,200 more Medicare Advantage plans operating in 2020 than in 2018, according to the CMS. Broken down by county, the average number of Medicare Advantage plan choices will rise from about 33 plans in 2019 to 39 plans in 2020. Since 2017, the average number per county has risen 49 percent.

Regarding Part D prescription drug plans, the average monthly premium on basic plans is projected to fall 13.5 percent to $30 in 2020 — the lowest average since 2013, the CMS reports.

Collectively, beneficiaries have saved roughly $2.65 billion in Medicare Advantage and Part D premium costs since 2017, the agency estimates. As for taxpayers, the continued decline in such costs over the past three years should save them almost $6 billion in the form of lower Medicare premium subsidies, the CMS asserts.

The premium declines for both programs are a result of several actions that CMS has taken over the last two years “to protect and strengthen the Medicare Advantage and Part D programs, driving competition and lowering costs,” the agency writes.

Key actions include:

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