- Medicare enrollment mistakes cost Connecticut seniors $10,000-$50,000+ over retirement through permanent penalties and coverage gaps
- Part B late enrollment penalty is 10% per year delayed—a permanent surcharge lasting your entire life
- COBRA and retiree coverage do NOT allow delaying Medicare Part B—you must enroll at 65 or face penalties
- Medigap Open Enrollment is a one-time, 6-month window—missing it means potential denial or higher premiums based on health
- Only employers with 20+ employees provide coverage allowing Medicare delay without penalty
Every year, thousands of Connecticut seniors make Medicare enrollment mistakes triggering permanent late enrollment penalties (10% per year delayed, lasting forever), coverage gaps exposing them to catastrophic medical costs, missed Medigap Open Enrollment rights making comprehensive coverage impossible to obtain, and delayed effective dates leaving them uninsured for months. These mistakes are rarely reversible and can cost Connecticut seniors $10,000-$50,000+ over retirement.
The High Cost of Medicare Enrollment Mistakes in Connecticut
Why Medicare Enrollment Mistakes Are So Common in Connecticut
- High employment rates past 65: Connecticut seniors often continue working past 65 (especially in Hartford
- Delayed Social Security claiming: Connecticut
- Small business ownership: Connecticut has high small business ownership rates—owners mistakenly believe their small company health plans allow delaying Medicare
- COBRA and retiree coverage: Connecticut professionals losing corporate jobs often elect COBRA or retiree health benefits and mistakenly think these allow delaying Medicare
Mistake #1: Missing Initial Enrollment Period Completely
Connecticut seniors who aren’t receiving Social Security benefits when they turn 65 must manually enroll in Medicare during their seven-month Initial Enrollment Period (3 months before birth month, birth month, 3 months after). Thousands of Connecticut seniors simply don’t know they need to enroll or assume automatic enrollment occurs—it doesn’t unless you’re already collecting Social Security.
Robert, West Hartford executive, turns 65 March 2024. Delaying Social Security until age 70. Never enrolls in Medicare Parts A or B because he assumes automatic enrollment. March 2026 (age 67) has heart attack requiring emergency surgery—discovers he has NO Medicare coverage. Hospital bills $185,000. Total cost: $223,100+ from one enrollment mistake including penalties, higher Medigap premiums, and uninsured medical bills.
How to Avoid Mistake #1
- Mark calendar 4 months before 65th birthday:
- Determine if you
- Enroll 3 months before turning 65 ensuring coverage begins first day of birth month
- Verify Medicare card arrives approximately 3 months before birthday
- If delaying Social Security, specifically note Medicare enrollment happens separately at age 65
Mistake #2: Thinking COBRA or Retiree Coverage Allows Delaying Medicare
Connecticut seniors losing employer coverage at ages 62-65 often elect COBRA continuation (up to 18 months) or retiree health benefits and mistakenly believe these count as ‘creditable coverage’ allowing them to delay Medicare Part B enrollment without penalties. They don’t—COBRA and retiree coverage are NOT considered active employer coverage for penalty purposes.
Late enrollment penalty: 10% × 1 year = 10% Part B surcharge ($18.50/month) permanent. Lifetime penalty: $18.50/month × 25 years = $5,550. Missed Medigap Open Enrollment may result in $40-60/month higher premiums. Total cost: $20,550+ from misunderstanding COBRA/retiree rules.
The Confusion: COBRA and retiree health benefits ARE ‘creditable coverage’ for Medicare Part D (prescription drug) purposes—you won’t get Part D late enrollment penalties. But COBRA and retiree coverage are NOT ‘qualifying employer coverage’ for Part B purposes—you must enroll in Part B at age 65 regardless of COBRA or retiree coverage.
Mistake #3: Missing Medigap Open Enrollment Period
Connecticut residents have a six-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period starting when they’re 65+ AND enrolled in Part B. During this window, insurance companies must sell you any Medigap plan regardless of health conditions. After this period, companies can deny coverage or charge significantly higher premiums based on health status.
Mistake #4: Wrong Part D Timing
Connecticut seniors must enroll in Medicare Part D (prescription drug coverage) during their Initial Enrollment Period or face permanent 1% per month penalties for each month delayed without creditable coverage. Many seniors skip Part D thinking they don’t need prescriptions now, then face lifetime penalties when they eventually need coverage.
Mistake #5: Small Employer Coverage Confusion
Connecticut small business owners and employees often believe their employer coverage allows delaying Medicare. The critical rule: Only employers with 20+ employees provide qualifying coverage that allows delaying Medicare Part B without penalty. Fewer than 20 employees? Medicare is primary and you MUST enroll at 65 or face permanent penalties.
Mistake #6: Late Part B Enrollment
Each 12-month period you delay Part B enrollment after eligibility (without qualifying employer coverage) adds 10% to your Part B premium permanently. Miss 3 years? That’s 30% higher premiums for life. On the standard $202.90/month Part B premium, that’s $60.87/month extra—$730/year—every year for the rest of your life.
Mistake #7: Ignoring IRMAA Planning
High-income Connecticut seniors face Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amounts (IRMAA) on Medicare Part B and Part D premiums. Income in the two years before Medicare enrollment affects premiums. Strategic income planning (Roth conversions, capital gains timing, retirement account distributions) can save thousands in IRMAA surcharges.