- term
- PREMIUM SURCHARGE
- normalized_term
- premium-surcharge
- category
- costs
- alias
- late enrollment penalty
- alias
- Part B surcharge
- alias
- premium penalty
- definition
- The standard Medicare Part B premium will go up ten percent for each full 12-month period (beginning with the first month after the end of your Initial Enrollment Period) that you could have had Medicare Part B but didn't take it. The additional premium amount is called a "premium surcharge." There will be a surcharge for Part D also.
- related_term
- premium-surcharge
- related_term
- part-a-premium
- related_term
- smi-premium
- related_term
- medicare-deductible
- source_url
- https://www.cms.gov/glossary?searchterm=&items_per_page=30&viewmode=list&page=25
- publisher
- MedicarePlans.com
- license
- CC-BY-4.0
Premium Surcharge is an additional Medicare premium amount charged when a beneficiary delays enrollment in certain Medicare programs after becoming eligible.
🧠 Full Definition
The term Premium Surcharge refers to the increased premium amount added to Medicare coverage costs when a beneficiary delays enrollment beyond their eligible enrollment period.
For Medicare Part B, the standard monthly premium generally increases by 10% for each full 12-month period that a person was eligible for Part B coverage but did not enroll. Similar late enrollment penalties may also apply to Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage.
📌 Key Characteristics
- Commonly called a late enrollment penalty
- Applies to delayed Medicare enrollment
- Often associated with Part B and Part D coverage
- Increases monthly premium costs
- Based on the length of delayed enrollment periods
💡 Why It Matters
Premium surcharges matter because delaying Medicare enrollment can lead to permanently higher monthly healthcare costs for beneficiaries.
These penalties can affect:
- monthly Medicare premium expenses
- long-term healthcare affordability
- Medicare enrollment timing decisions
- retirement healthcare budgeting
- evaluation of coverage eligibility periods
🌐 MedicarePlans.com Perspective
Many beneficiaries are unaware that delaying Medicare enrollment without qualifying coverage can create permanent premium penalties. Understanding premium surcharge rules can help beneficiaries avoid unnecessary long-term healthcare costs and make more informed Medicare enrollment decisions.
🗣️ Example Use
“The beneficiary paid a premium surcharge after delaying Medicare Part B enrollment beyond the Initial Enrollment Period.”
🔗 Related Terms
📚 Source Definition
Original definition sourced from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
PREMIUM SURCHARGE: The standard Medicare Part B premium will go up ten percent for each full 12-month period (beginning with the first month after the end of your Initial Enrollment Period) that you could have had Medicare Part B but didn’t take it. The additional premium amount is called a “premium surcharge.” There will be a surcharge for Part D also.
Page content independently curated and maintained by David W. Bynon, Healthcare AI Governance Architect & Medicare Systems Steward, using a standardized, data-driven methodology designed for accurate, non-commercial Medicare plan interpretation and resolution.