No. Your Medicare Part D plan's Initial Deductible
does not affect
when you go into the Donut Hole or Coverage Gap. However, your Initial Deductible
will impact how quickly you exit the Donut Hole. (Please remember that when
you exit the Donut Hole or Coverage Gap when you exceed your plan's total out-of-pocket spending limit
(
TrOOP)
and then you will enter the
Catastrophic
Coverage stage of your Medicare prescription drug plan.)
As a reminder, if your Medicare Part D plan has an Initial Deductible, you will pay 100% of your
prescription drug costs until you meet your deductible. For instance, if your drug plan
includes the standard $505 deductible (
$545 in 2024), you pay 100% of your drug costs until reaching $505 - then
you enter the
Initial Coverage phase
and you share drug costs with your Medicare Part D plan.
Please note that some Medicare Part D prescription drug plans with an Initial Deductible
exclude one or more generic drug tiers
from the deductible - so you have immediate coverage for these lower-costing formulary tiers and
only your more expensive medications are subject to the deductible.
Entering the Donut Hole
You enter the Donut Hole based on your Medicare Part D plan's negotiated retail drug cost - and
not what you actually spend on your medications. For example, if you purchase a medication that has a retail cost of $300 and pay a $47 co-pay, the $300 counts toward meeting your
Initial Coverage Limit (ICL) and entering the Donut Hole. As a reminder, your "
retail drug costs" or your Medicare plan's negotiated retail prices are not necessarily your pharmacy's everyday prices (although your drug plan's retail costs should be similar to your pharmacies everyday pricing).
Need a bit more? Here are two different ways to explain how your Initial Deductible relates to the Coverage Gap or Donut Hole:
(1) “
The
Initial Deductible has no effect on when you enter the Donut Hole, but will
affect when you enter the Catastrophic Coverage phase” –
True.
Only the retail value of your drug purchases affects when you enter the Donut Hole, no
matter what your Initial Deductible ($0 or $250 or $505 deductible).
(2) “
Your Initial Coverage Limit is measured by the retail value of your
medication purchases and the first $505 you spend toward your Initial
Deductible will count toward reaching the Initial Coverage Limit.” –
Also True.
If
you spend $505 in the Initial Deductible, you are paying 100% of the retail
price for $505 worth of medications – and the $505 will count toward reaching the Initial
Coverage Limit or Donut Hole entry point.
As a more specific example:
If you fill your prescription for a Tier 1 drug Atorvastatin (generic
Lipitor (r)),
and Atorvastatin is covered by your Medicare prescription drug plan, the
retail cost of the Atorvastatin will be added to your total retail
prescription drug costs, no matter if you pay 100% during the Initial
Deductible or you pay a smaller copayment (for instance, $1) since this
is a Tier 1 generic drug. In other words, the retail drug cost is
counted toward reaching your Medicare Part D plan's Initial Coverage
Limit - as explained in more detail below, the amount you actually paid
for the drug counts toward exiting the Donut Hole.
More on exiting the Donut Hole
You exit the Donut Hole when your out-of-pocket costs (or Total Out-of-Pocket costs -
TrOOP) reaches a certain level - and enter the
Catastrophic Coverage phase.
TrOOP is based on what you have spent on covered prescription drugs
during the year (or what someone has spent on your behalf - such as the
70% portion of your brand-name drug discount paid by the pharmaceutical industry). So, if you have spent more money out-of-pocket because of your Initial Deductible,
you will exit the Donut Hole a little earlier than someone who has no Initial Deductible - again, because you have spent more of your own money at the beginning of your Medicare Part D coverage.
Does the Initial Coverage Limit and True Out-of-Pocket Costs (TrOOP) threshold change every year?
Yes. The Initial Coverage Limit and TrOOP values
change every year, and here is a table showing a summary of these values
and how they have changed over the past few years:
https://q1medicare.com/PartD-The-MedicarePartDOutlookAllYears.php
Are you still not sure how this all works? No problem - just click on the following link and send us your question:
https://q1medicare.com/Helpdesk.php
Related questions:
What are retail drug costs for purposes of calculating the Donut Hole?
Q1FAQ.com/420
What prescription related expenses do not count toward the Donut Hole?
Q1FAQ.com/421