2026 is shaping up to be one of the most “noticeably different” Medicare years in a while—not because the rules are unrecognizable, but because the cost and prescription-drug pieces are moving in ways that many beneficiaries will actually feel in their monthly budget.

Here’s a Medicare-advisor-friendly breakdown you can drop straight into your site (and use as a client talking sheet).


The big headline: Prescription drugs get a new ceiling (and new pricing)

1) The Part D out-of-pocket cap is $2,100 in 2026

If your client has Medicare drug coverage (Part D—either standalone PDP or MAPD), their annual out-of-pocket spending for covered Part D drugs is capped at $2,100 in 2026. Once they hit the cap, they won’t pay copays/coinsurance for covered Part D drugs for the rest of the year. Medicare+1

Advisor tip: “Cap” doesn’t mean their plan premium disappears. And it doesn’t apply to non-covered drugs. It’s still huge—especially for clients with expensive brand medications.

2) Medicare’s first negotiated drug prices take effect January 1, 2026

For the first time, Medicare-negotiated prices (“Maximum Fair Prices”) apply to 10 high-spend Part D drugs starting Jan 1, 2026. CMS

Why it matters in plain English: Some clients will see meaningful drops in what they pay at the pharmacy—especially when combined with the $2,100 cap.

3) The Medicare Prescription Payment Plan becomes more “sticky” in 2026

The Medicare Prescription Payment Plan lets beneficiaries spread Part D out-of-pocket costs across the year instead of getting whacked by big pharmacy bills early on. Medicare also notes the cap and how the payment option interacts with it. Medicare+1
And importantly: plans are required to automatically renew participation for subsequent plan years (with notice and an option to opt out). eCFR

Advisor script: “This doesn’t lower drug costs—it can make cash flow smoother.”

4) Two numbers clients will ask about: the Part D deductible + “base premium”

  • Max Part D deductible: $615 in 2026 (some plans are lower; some are $0). Medicare+1

  • National base beneficiary premium used for the late-enrollment penalty calculation: $38.99 for 2026. Medicare


Medicare “core costs” in 2026: Part A and Part B move up

Part B: premium and deductible increase

  • Standard Part B premium: $202.90/month (2026) (up from $185.00 in 2025) CMS

  • Part B deductible: $283 (2026) (up from $257 in 2025) CMS

CMS also published updated IRMAA tiers for higher-income beneficiaries (meaning some clients will pay more than the standard premium). CMS

Part A: hospital deductible and coinsurance increase

  • Part A inpatient hospital deductible: $1,736 (2026) CMS

  • Daily coinsurance amounts also rise (hospital days 61–90 and lifetime reserve days, plus skilled nursing coinsurance). CMS

Advisor framing: “Even if you love your plan, it’s normal for Medicare’s baseline cost-sharing to tick upward each year.”


Medicare Advantage shoppers: 2026 adds a new “safety valve” (because directories got messy)

For 2026 enrollment, Medicare Plan Finder added Medicare Advantage provider directory information—helpful in theory, but it’s also created real-world confusion for some shoppers. AARP

New protection if someone chose a plan based on incorrect provider directory info

CMS is providing an additional opportunity for certain enrollees who relied on Plan Finder directory info and then learned their preferred provider isn’t actually in-network. The AMA summarized CMS’s approach as giving impacted people extra time (within a defined window) to change MA coverage or return to Original Medicare. American Medical Association+1

Advisor best practice: Always verify networks in two places: Plan Finder and the carrier/provider confirmation (and document it). 2026 is not the year to “assume the directory is right.”


A new Original Medicare prior-authorization pilot begins in 2026 (selected states)

CMS is launching a model called WISeR (Wasteful and Inappropriate Service Reduction), where providers/suppliers in selected regions can submit prior authorization for certain items/services (or go through an alternative review process). CMS

What to tell clients:

  • This is not a nationwide “everything needs prior auth” change.

  • But if a client lives in an affected area and needs certain services/items, timelines and paperwork may matter more than before.


Dates to remind clients (every single year, because… humans)

  • Medicare Open Enrollment: October 15 – December 7 (changes effective Jan 1) Medicare+1

  • Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment (for people already on MA): January 1 – March 31 Medicare


Your 2026 client review checklist (simple, powerful, repeatable)

  1. Update the medication list (exact drug name, dosage, frequency).

  2. Run Plan Finder comparisons—then confirm network + formulary with the plan. Medicare+1

  3. Check whether the client should use the Prescription Payment Plan for cash-flow smoothing. CMS+1

  4. Flag IRMAA risk (especially for clients with RMDs, capital gains, or Roth conversions). CMS

  5. Screen for Extra Help / assistance programs if drug costs are a burden. Medicare