Yes. If you are a Medicare beneficiary and your annual
income (MAGI) exceeds certain limits - and you are enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan (HMO, PPO, or PFFS) that includes prescription drug coverage (
MAPD), then your MAPD
actually includes Medicare Part D drug coverage (along with Medicare
Part A and Medicare Part B coverage) - and you can be charged an Income-Related
Monthly Adjustment Amount (
IRMAA) for both your Medicare Part D and Medicare Part B coverage.
In short, Medicare Part D IRMAA is assessed to anyone getting Part D coverage from a stand-alone Medicare Part D plan (PDP) -- Medicare Advantage plan that includes drug coverage (MAPD) -- or a Medicare Cost plan - even if this coverage is paid for by your
employer, union, or retiree health plan.
Question: Will I pay Part D IRMAA if my Medicare Advantage plan does not have drug coverage?
No. If you are enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan
that does
not include prescription drug coverage (
MA) and you do not have any other Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage, then you will not be charged Medicare Part D IRMAA --
but you will still pay Medicare Part B IRMAA.
Question: What if I am enrolled in an MAPD with a $0 premium?
Even if you are enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan (MAPD) with a $0 premium - or a Medicare Advantage plan that
returns or rebated a portion of your Part B premium, when your income exceeds the
IRMAA limits (such as $106,000 for an individual for 2025), you will need to pay Medicare Part D IRMAA (and Medicare Part B IRMAA).
Question: What is IRMAA and who pays IRMAA?
If you are a Medicare
beneficiary who earns a higher income, the government will assess an Income-Related
Monthly Adjustment Amount (
IRMAA)
that you must pay in addition to your Medicare Part B premium and your
Medicare
Part D premium (if you are enrolled in a Medicare prescription drug plan
(PDP) or Medicare Advantage plan that includes prescription drug
coverage (MAPD)).
IRMAA income limits can change each year and although they have remained
relatively stable for the past several years, starting in 2020, the
IRMAA income brackets are adjusted for inflation, therefore changing the
amount of IRMAA many people will pay. Here are links to IRMAA
information for the past several years:
The 2025 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2025 IRMAA: Slight increase in Medicare Part D IRMAA payments for some."
The 2024 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2024 IRMAA: Slight increase in Medicare Part D IRMAA payments for some along with changes in the IRMAA brackets due to annual inflation adjustments."
The 2023 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2023 IRMAA: Slight decrease in Medicare Part D IRMAA payments along with
changes in the IRMAA brackets due to annual inflation adjustments."
The 2022 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2022
IRMAA: Slight increase in Medicare Part D IRMAA payments for most along
with changes in the IRMAA brackets due to annual inflation adjustments."
The 2021 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2021
IRMAA: Slight increase in Medicare Part D IRMAA payments for most along
with changes in the IRMAA brackets due to annual inflation adjustments.
"
The 2020 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2020
IRMAA: Slight Decrease in Medicare Part D IRMAA payments for most along
with larger decreases for some as IRMAA brackets become annually
inflation adjusted."
The 2019 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2019
IRMAA: 5% decrease in Medicare Part D IRMAA for individual earning
incomes between $85,000 - $500,000 and couples earning $170,000 -
$750,000."
The 2018 IRMAA limits can be found online in our article:
"
2018
IRMAA: 35% to 58% Medicare Part D IRMAA payment increases for
individual earning incomes between $133,500 - $214,000 and couples
earning $267,000 - $428,000."
We have the 2017 IRMAA limits online here:
"
Roughly
a 4.5% increase in the 2017 Income Related Monthly Adjustment Amounts
(IRMAA) for Medicare beneficiaries with higher annual incomes"
And as reference, we also have the 2016 IRMAA limits online here: "
Roughly a 3% increase in the 2016 Income Related
Monthly Adjustment Amounts (IRMAA) for Medicare beneficiaries with higher
annual incomes"