What do I pay when the purchase of my medications moves me into the Donut Hole, my plan coverage or the Donut Hole discount price?
Both. When you purchase your medications, the retail cost of your drug can move you from one part of your Medicare Part D plan coverage into another part.
When this occurs and your prescription purchase moves you between Medicare plan coverage phases, you will have a “
straddle claim” and you will notice a difference in your drug cost as a portion of coverage will fall into two or more parts of your drug plan. In this example, the cost of your prescription medication purchase is split between your Initial Coverage Phase and your Donut Hole phase.
As a note, the negotiated retail cost of your medications determines when you reach the Initial Coverage Limit (ICL) -- and the ICL can change each year. The standard
ICL for 2023 is $4,660 (
$5,030 in 2024). So when the negotiated retail cost of you medications is over $4,660, you will move into the Coverage Gap. (To see the Initial Coverage Limit for another year, you can use the link:
https://q1medicare.com/PartD-The-MedicarePartDOutlookAllYears.php.)
Once you exceed your Initial Coverage Limit, you will enter the Donut Hole portion of your Medicare Part D plan coverage and the remainder of your prescription purchase will be reduced by the Donut Hole discount.
So you will pay your plan's cost-sharing (copayment or coinsurance) for your medication PLUS you will pay 25% of the balance of the negotiated retail price above the Initial Coverage Limit that falls into the Donut Hole (the 75% donut hole discount is applied. You can
click here to read more about the Donut Hole discount).
How does this work? Example of a 2023 Straddle Claim:
Your Medicare Part D plan's negotiated retail price of your formulary drug: $1,000
Your total accumulated retail drug costs before the $1,000 drug purchase: $4,540
Your Medicare Part D plan has a standard $4,660 Initial Coverage Limit
Your plan's coverage cost or co-pay for the $1,000 formulary drug: $100
1. Your cost to exit the Initial Coverage phase
First, you
will need to spend $120 to meet the $4,660 Initial Coverage Limit
($4,660 - $4,540) - and you will pay $100 as a co-pay for your
medication during this phase.
2. The cost in the Donut Hole
Next, the
balance of the retail cost or $880 ($1,000 - $120) will carry over to
the next phase of your drug coverage or the Donut Hole where you will
receive the
75% Donut Hole discount costing you $220 in the second portion of this straddle claim.
3. Your total cost for the $1,000 drug
So together in 2023, you would pay $100 + $220 for a total cost of $320 for this drug.
Question: Can the coverage cost exceed the retail drug cost?
No. The total of your plan's cost-sharing plus the Donut Hole
cost (not including the Donut Hole discount) cannot exceed the normal
negotiated retail price of your medication -- as you never pay more than
the negotiated retail price.
Click here to see another example
and further explanation of what happens when you buy a medication and
the cost moves you into the Donut Hole portion of your Medicare Part D
plan.
Follow up Question: So, if the total cost of one drug
purchase takes my annual cost over my Medicare plan's coverage limit and
into the Donut Hole, will I pay the copay for my drug plus the
discounted cost that is over the coverage limit?
Yes. Please see our Frequently Asked Question:
Q1Faq.com/504