- Plan N saves Connecticut seniors $840-$1,740 annually in premiums compared to Plan G ($70-$145/month lower premiums per Medicare.gov)
- Plan N requires up to $20 office visit copays and up to $50 ER copays, while Plan G has zero copays after Part B deductible
- Connecticut seniors visiting doctors fewer than 40 times annually typically save money overall with Plan N despite copays
- Hartford Hospital, Yale New Haven, and most Connecticut providers don
- s main additional benefit
- Healthy Connecticut seniors ages 65-75 with few medical needs often save $10,000-$15,000+ over 10-15 years choosing Plan N over Plan G
Connecticut seniors enrolling in Medicare Supplement insurance face a critical decision: choose Medicare Supplement Plan G (the most popular Medigap plan) or Medicare Supplement Plan N (the value alternative)? This decision affects thousands of dollars over retirement—Plan N costs significantly less monthly but requires modest copays when visiting doctors, while Plan G costs more monthly but eliminates almost all out-of-pocket costs after the Part B deductible.
The Plan G vs Plan N Decision Facing Connecticut Seniors
For Connecticut Medicare beneficiaries, this isn’t an obvious choice. According to Medicare.gov’s 2026 Medigap plan finder, Plan N premiums in Connecticut range from $176-$317/month, while Plan G premiums range from $246-$462/month—a $70-145 monthly difference ($840-$1,740 annually). That premium savings is substantial for Connecticut seniors on fixed Social Security and pension incomes. But Plan N requires up to $20 copays for doctor and specialist visits plus up to $50 emergency room copays (waived if admitted), potentially reducing savings if you visit doctors frequently.
Coverage Differences: What You Actually Pay Out-of-Pocket
Difference #1: Office Visit and ER Copays (The Main Difference). Plan G: $0 copays for all visits after deductible. Plan N: Up to $20 for office visits, up to $50 for ER (waived if admitted). Difference #2: Part B Excess Charges. Plan G covers 100%, Plan N doesn’t cover. Connecticut Reality: Excess charges are extremely rare in Connecticut—virtually all providers accept Medicare assignment.
Connecticut Premium Costs 2026: Plan G vs Plan N
Total Annual Cost Scenarios: Plan G vs Plan N
Break-Even Analysis: How Many Doctor Visits?
Connecticut 65-Year-Old Female: Premium difference $600/year ÷ $20 copay per visit = 30 doctor visits. Conclusion: Visiting doctors fewer than 30 times annually saves money with Plan N. 70-Year-Old Male: Premium difference $780/year ÷ $20 copay = 39 doctor visits. Very few seniors visit doctors 39 times yearly, making Plan N the clear financial winner for most.
Real Hartford County Examples: Plan G vs Plan N
Example 1: Active Healthy Hartford Senior
Margaret, age 67, West Hartford. Excellent health, walks 3 miles daily, travels frequently. 8 medical visits yearly (annual physical, 2 follow-ups, quarterly cardiologist, biannual dentist). Plan G Total: $2,820/year. Plan N Total: $2,260/year. Result: Plan N saves Margaret $560 annually. 10-Year Projection: Plan N savings $5,000-6,500.
Example 2: Hartford Senior With Chronic Conditions
Robert, age 72, Manchester. Type 2 diabetes (well-controlled), high cholesterol, arthritis. 17 medical visits yearly (quarterly diabetes, biannual endocrinologist, quarterly podiatrist, annual physical, 6 follow-ups). Plan G Total: $3,120/year. Plan N Total: $2,680/year. Result: Plan N saves Robert $440 annually despite moderate healthcare utilization.
When Plan G Is the Better Choice
Choose Plan G If You…
- Visit doctors more than 30-40 times annually
- Have multiple chronic conditions requiring frequent specialist visits
- Value predictable costs with zero copays for budgeting
- Can afford higher premiums for peace of mind
- Plan to see out-of-state or non-participating providers (excess charge protection)
When Plan N Is the Better Choice
Choose Plan N If You…
- Are generally healthy with few doctor visits (under 25-30 annually)
- Want to save $600-900 annually on premiums
- Can handle occasional $20 copays without budget strain
- Plan to primarily use Connecticut Medicare-participating providers (no excess charges)
- Are budget-conscious on fixed Social Security income