If the retail cost of
your medications is over
$313 each month, you will enter the 2018 Donut Hole or Coverage Gap.
As a reminder, you will enter your Medicare Part D prescription drug plan's Donut
Hole or Coverage Gap if the total retail value of your formulary prescription
purchases exceeds your plan's
Initial Coverage Limit -- and the 2018
standard Initial Coverage Limit
is: $3,750.
For example, if you use a formulary medication that has a retail cost of $375 and you pay only
a $60 co-pay with your Medicare Part D plan, your Medicare plan will pay the remaining $315, but the total retail cost of $375
counts toward meeting your Initial Coverage Limit or entering the Donut Hole - and if your average monthly retail drug costs are $375, you will enter the 2018 Donut Hole or Coverage Gap in late-October or early-November (see chart below).
Retail Drug Cost vs. Your Actual Drug Cost
Remember ... the retail drug cost of your medications is usually not what you actually spend for your prescriptions, but what is spent by you
plus what your Medicare Part D plan pays (or others pay on your behalf). And your Medicare plan's monthly
Explanation of Benefits (EOB) letter will
not state "Retail Drug Cost", but instead, your EOB will state "Plan Paid" and "You Paid" - and added together this is your plan's negotiated retail drug cost.
(However, if the retail price of your formulary medication is less than your co-payment, you will pay the retail price and not the higher co-payment. For example, if you are purchasing a Tier 3 medication with a $40 retail cost and the co-pay is $47, you will pay the $40 retail cost and not the higher $47 co-pay - you never pay more than your Medicare plan's negotiated retail drug price.)
Where else can you see retail drug price information?
Both
our
Formulary Browser (showing all drugs
for a single Medicare plan) and our
Drug Finder (showing all Medicare
plans covering a single drug) include CMS formulary data and average retail pricing information. For more information, our
Retail Drug Pricing Detail pages show the
pricing history for each medication (when available). As noted, our retail drug pricing information is the average price across all pharmacies in a specific region and actual retail drug costs can vary slightly at your specific pharmacy. You can also telephone your Medicare plan or a Medicare representative (1-800-Medicare) for retail drug price information.
The good news: If retail costs
of your prescription have not changed since 2017 (which is unlikely), the 2018 Donut Hole or Coverage Gap should start just slightly
later since the 2018 Initial Coverage Limit ($3,750) is slightly higher than the 2017 Initial
Coverage Limit of $3,700.
In other words,
you will be able to purchase slightly more prescriptions before entering the 2018 Donut Hole
as compared to 2017.
For
example, if your average monthly retail medication costs were $400 in 2016, you entered
the 2016 Donut Hole in early-September 2016. However, if your costs remained
the same the next year, you would enter the 2017 Donut Hole sometime in early-October 2017. Based on the same $400 average monthly retail drug cost, you would enter the 2018 Donut Hole mid-October.
And more good news: No Donut Hole for Medicare beneficiaries with Extra Help
If you are qualified for the Medicare Part D
Extra Help program or Low-Income Subsidy (LIS), then you will
never enter the 2018 Donut Hole and the cost of your prescriptions will remain constant until you reach the Catastrophic Coverage portion of your Medicare Part D plan where your drug costs may actually be reduced depending on your
financial resources. And if you are qualified for your state's Medicaid program, you are automatically qualified for Extra Help.
If you are purchasing Medicare Part D drugs with a retail cost of over $313 per month, when will you enter the 2018 Donut Hole or Coverage Gap?
The chart below shows the monthly retail drug costs that would cause you to enter the
Coverage Gap or Donut Hole for any given month.
Minimum
Average Monthly Retail Drug Cost
Causing You to Enter the Donut Hole in a
Given Month
|
You will enter
the Donut Hole in . . .
|
If your 2018
monthly retail drug
costs are over . . .
|
If your 2017
monthly retail drug
costs are over . . .
|
If your 2016
monthly retail drug
costs are over . . . |
January |
$3,750 |
$3,700 |
$3,310 |
February |
$1,875 |
$1,850 |
$1,655 |
March |
$1,250 |
$1,234 |
$1,104 |
April |
$938 |
$925 |
$828 |
May |
$750 |
$740 |
$662 |
June |
$625 |
$617 |
$552 |
July |
$536 |
$529 |
$473 |
August |
$469 |
$463 |
$414 |
September |
$417 |
$412 |
$368 |
October |
$375 |
$370 |
$331 |
November |
$341 |
$337 |
$301 |
December |
$313 |
$309 |
$276 |
Bottom line: If the retail cost of your medications averages over $313 each month and you are not eligible for Extra Help, you will enter the Donut Hole some time during 2018.
If you are entering the 2018 Donut Hole, please also see our article:
"
The 2018 Donut Hole Discount increases (... and what this means to you)"
You can also use our 2018 Donut Hole Calculator or PDP- Planner to get an idea of how you can budget for 2018 drug costs. The following link is for an example of a person with retail brand-name drug costs totaling $800 per month:
https://q1medicare.com/PartD-PartDCoverageGapCalculator2018.php?pgtype=ex1 you can adjust the example and drug mix to estimate your actual out-of-pocket costs.