Let’s get one thing straight.

Medicare is not “automatic and free.”
And it is definitely not simple.

If you miss the wrong deadline, Medicare will not send you flowers and say, “That’s okay.”
They send penalties.

So let’s talk clearly — no fluff — about the enrollment deadlines that matter and how to keep yourself out of trouble.


1. Your Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)

This is your first big window.

It starts 3 months before the month you turn 65,
includes your birthday month,
and ends 3 months after.

That’s a 7-month window.

Miss it?
You could face:

If you’re already collecting Social Security, you’re usually enrolled automatically in Part A and Part B.

If not?
You must enroll yourself.

Don’t assume. Confirm.


2. General Enrollment Period (GEP)

If you miss your Initial Enrollment Period, you fall into this bucket.

January 1 – March 31 each year

Coverage starts later, and yes — penalties may apply.

This is the “I forgot” enrollment window.

Not ideal.


3. Medicare Advantage & Part D Open Enrollment

October 15 – December 7

This is the big one most people hear about.

During this window you can:

But here’s the catch most people miss:

Switching back to Original Medicare does not guarantee you can get a Medigap plan without medical underwriting in most states.

That’s where people get surprised.


4. Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period

January 1 – March 31

If you’re already in a Medicare Advantage plan, you can:

But you can only do it once during this period.


5. Special Enrollment Periods (SEPs)

These happen if:

This is where local changes matter — especially in rural counties where plans sometimes disappear or hospitals change networks.

Deadlines here vary.

And they are not generous.


The Penalties (This Is Where People Get Hurt)

Part B Late Enrollment Penalty

10% added to your premium for every full 12-month period you were eligible but didn’t enroll.

For life.

Part D Late Enrollment Penalty

Small monthly penalty — but also for life.

Medicare doesn’t forget.


How to Actually Track All This Without Losing Your Mind

Let’s be practical.

Here’s what works:

1. Put Your 65th Birthday Timeline on a Physical Calendar

Not just your phone. A real calendar you see every day.

2. Set Two Reminders — Not One

One reminder 3 months before.
Another 1 month before.

3. Keep a Medicare Folder

You would not believe how many people throw these out.

4. Re-Review Every September

Before October 15.
Always.

Plans change every year.

Premiums change.
Drug formularies change.
Networks change.

If you don’t look, you won’t know.


The Quiet Truth

Most Medicare mistakes are not caused by stupidity.

They’re caused by:

Medicare is not difficult because you’re not smart.

It’s difficult because it’s structured in layers and deadlines.

You just need structure around it.


Final Thought

Deadlines are not suggestions in Medicare.

They are financial landmines.

Mark them. Track them. Recheck them.

When you’re ready to review your options or confirm your timing, visit MedicareSelfEnroll.com.

We are here for you if plans change in your area.
We offer you options so you can choose the coverage that’s right for you.

Please like, share, subscribe, and ring the notification bell so you don’t miss our next video.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *