⚡ Key Takeaways
- CMS-4205-F (effective 2025, continuing 2026) substantially tightened TPMO marketing rules, FMO override limits, and disclosure requirements.
- The TPMO disclaimer must be delivered at the start of every TPMO call — if you do not hear it, end the call.
- Medicare does not call beneficiaries unsolicited to verify Medicare numbers, demand information, or sell plans.
- Door-to-door MA/PDP sales, unsolicited cold calls, and misuse of the Medicare logo are prohibited under CMS rules.
- Report violations to 1-800-MEDICARE, CT Insurance Department, FTC, FCC, and the CT SMP/CHOICES (1-800-994-9422).
- The best defense is a vetted local Connecticut broker who follows the 12-point checklist and the CMS Marketing Guidelines.
Key Takeaways
The Scope of the Problem
Sources: HHS OIG Reports, Senate Finance Committee, FTC Press Releases
CMS Marketing Rules for 2026 (CMS-4205-F)
Sources: CMS-4205-F Final Rule Federal Register, CMS MCMG 2026
The TPMO Disclaimer You Must Hear
Sources: CMS TPMO Memo
Unsolicited Contact: The Prohibited Practices
Sources: FCC TCPA
Medicare Card and Medicare Discount Card Scams
Television and Celebrity-Endorsement Scams
Sources: FTC Deceptive Advertising
Unauthorized Enrollment
Agent Steering and Commission Bias
Robocall and Phishing Scams
Sources: FCC Consumer Complaints, FTC Report Fraud
Reporting Paths: CMS, CT Insurance, FTC, FCC, DCP
Where to report Medicare scams and agent misconduct in Connecticut
| Issue | Primary Reporting Channel | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| Unauthorized MA / Part D enrollment | 1-800-MEDICARE | 1-800-633-4227 (TTY 1-877-486-2048) |
| TPMO marketing violation | 1-800-MEDICARE + CMS Marketing Compliance | 1-800-MEDICARE; report online at cms.gov |
| Licensed agent misconduct | Connecticut Insurance Department Consumer Affairs | portal.ct.gov/cid (Consumer Affairs Division) |
| Medicare card / discount card scam | 1-800-MEDICARE + FTC | FTC: reportfraud.ftc.gov |
| Identity theft (medical or financial) | FTC IdentityTheft.gov + SSA Fraud | identitytheft.gov; SSA OIG 1-800-269-0271 |
| Robocall TCPA violation | FCC Consumer Complaints | consumercomplaints.fcc.gov |
| Deceptive advertising / sales practice | FTC + Connecticut DCP | FTC: reportfraud.ftc.gov; CT DCP: portal.ct.gov/dcp |
| Connecticut Senior Medicare Patrol | Connecticut SMP | 1-800-994-9422 (statewide CHOICES line) |
| Provider billing fraud (incl. QMB balance billing) | 1-800-MEDICARE + Connecticut SMP | Both channels |
| Suspected criminal Medicare fraud | HHS OIG Hotline | 1-800-HHS-TIPS (1-800-447-8477) |
Sources: Senior Medicare Patrol
Three Connecticut Scam-Avoidance Scenarios
Scenario 1 — Bristol: The Phone Call That Was Not Medicare
Scenario 2 — New Haven: The Unauthorized Enrollment Discovered in February
Scenario 3 — Stamford: The TV Ad That Led to a Steered Enrollment
The 10-Question Scam-Avoidance Checklist
Ten questions to ask before sharing any information with a Medicare contact
- Did I initiate this contact, or did they call me? If they called me unsolicited, the contact is presumptively non-compliant.
- Did the caller deliver the CMS-required TPMO disclaimer at the start of the call?
- Can the caller provide their Connecticut National Producer Number for verification on nipr.com?
- Is the caller asking for my Medicare number, Social Security number, or financial information? Medicare does not call unsolicited to ask for this.
- Is the caller pressuring me to enroll, decide, or provide information immediately?
- Did the caller offer to provide a written comparison of plans before any enrollment?
- Did the caller obtain a signed Scope of Appointment before discussing specific products?
- Is the caller using the Medicare name, logo, or color scheme in a way that implies CMS endorsement?
- Has the caller asked me for any payment beyond the standard plan premium (which is paid directly to the carrier, not to the agent)?
- Can I verify the company name, the agent name, the licensing, and the CMS appointment status before sharing any information?
Extended Connecticut Mistakes & Scams Analysis (2026)
Sources: Medicare.gov Medigap GI
Sources: SSA Part B Penalty
Sources: Medicare Fraud Reporting
Sources: CMS TPMO Rules
Sources: CT Senior Medicare Patrol
Sources: NIPR License Lookup
Sources: HHS OIG Hotline
Sources: MyMedicare.gov
Sources: CT CID Producer Lookup
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Medicare ever call beneficiaries unsolicited?
No. Medicare does not call beneficiaries unsolicited to verify Medicare numbers, request personal information, or sell plans. Any unsolicited contact claiming to be Medicare should be treated as a scam unless you can independently verify the source through 1-800-MEDICARE.
What is the TPMO disclaimer?
A CMS-required statement at the start of every TPMO call: ‘We do not offer every plan available in your area. … Please contact Medicare.gov, 1-800-MEDICARE, or your local State Health Insurance Assistance Program to get information on all of your options.’ If you do not hear this, end the call.
Can a Medicare agent show up at my door uninvited?
No. CMS prohibits door-to-door MA and Part D sales without a prior beneficiary request. Politely end the conversation and report the contact to 1-800-MEDICARE and the Connecticut Insurance Department.
What is a Medicare Discount Card?
There is no current federal Medicare Discount Card. Any contact mentioning a ‘Medicare Discount Card’ or ‘Medicare Plus Card’ or ‘Medicare Flex Card’ should be treated as a scam (with the limited exception of plan-specific ‘flex cards’ offered as supplemental benefits by certain MA plans to their enrolled members).
What should I do if I receive an unauthorized enrollment?
Call 1-800-MEDICARE immediately to file a complaint and request retroactive cancellation. Call the Connecticut Insurance Department Consumer Affairs Division to file a producer misconduct complaint. Call your previous plan to request reinstatement under the unauthorized enrollment SEP.
Where do I report a robocall claiming to be from Medicare?
FCC Consumer Complaints (consumercomplaints.fcc.gov) for the TCPA violation. FTC Report Fraud (reportfraud.ftc.gov) for the deceptive practice. 1-800-MEDICARE for the Medicare-specific complaint.
How do I verify a Medicare agent is legitimate?
Search NIPR (nipr.com) or Sircon (sircon.com) using the agent’s name or NPN to confirm Connecticut Accident & Health license status. Check the Connecticut Insurance Department complaint database. Ask the agent for AHIP completion date, E&O carrier and limits, and carrier appointments.
What is the Connecticut Senior Medicare Patrol?
A federally-funded program coordinated through the Connecticut Department of Aging and Disability Services that helps beneficiaries detect, prevent, and report Medicare fraud. Reach SMP through the statewide CHOICES line at 1-800-994-9422.
Is it ever appropriate to share my Medicare number?
Yes — with your physician’s office, pharmacy, hospital, or licensed Medicare agent during a legitimate enrollment or service interaction you initiated. Never share your Medicare number in response to unsolicited contact.
What is QMB balance billing and how do I report it?
Federal law prohibits Medicare providers from billing QMB beneficiaries for Medicare cost-sharing. If you are QMB-enrolled and receive a bill from a Medicare provider, do not pay; contact your Medicare agent, the Connecticut SMP, or 1-800-MEDICARE to report the violation.
Can the FTC really stop Medicare scams?
The FTC has pursued multi-million-dollar settlements with TPMO entities and Medicare-related lead-generation companies for deceptive practices. Enforcement is slow but real. Every individual complaint adds to the evidence base for future enforcement.
What is my best defense against Medicare scams?
Work with a vetted local Connecticut independent broker who passes the 12-point checklist; verify every contact through 1-800-MEDICARE or your CHOICES counselor; never share personal information in response to unsolicited contact; and report violations through the appropriate channels.