Healthcare is the ultimate wild card in retirement planning. You can estimate your housing costs and track your grocery bills, but a single medical diagnosis can upend your cash flow overnight. As you approach your coverage decisions for 2027, the financial stakes of choosing how to manage your Medicare have never been higher.
With average Medicare Advantage premiums dropping to just $14 a month in 2026, it is tempting to view these plans as the ultimate budget-saver. However, healthcare math goes far beyond your monthly premium. The true cost of your coverage includes the deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance you are forced to pay when you actually need medical care.
Choosing between a Medicare Advantage plan and a Medicare Supplement policy—often called Medigap—is not just about finding the cheapest option today. It is about deciding how you want to finance your health risks for the next two to three decades. One path offers low upfront costs but higher risk if you get sick; the other requires higher monthly premiums in exchange for near-total predictability.

The Essentials: Understanding the Baseline Costs
Before you can compare Advantage and Supplement plans, you must understand the foundation they are built upon. Every Medicare enrollee starts at the exact same baseline: Original Medicare, administered by the federal government.
Original Medicare comes in two distinct parts. Part A functions as your hospital insurance, covering inpatient care, limited skilled nursing facility stays, and hospice care. If you or your spouse worked and paid Medicare taxes for at least ten years, you receive Part A without a monthly premium. However, it is not entirely free. If you are hospitalized in 2026, you face a hefty $1,736 deductible per benefit period before Part A coverage kicks in.
Part B is your medical insurance. It covers outpatient care, doctor visits, preventive services, and durable medical equipment. Unlike Part A, almost everyone pays a monthly premium for Part B. According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the standard Part B premium for 2026 is $202.90 per month. You must also meet an annual Part B deductible of $283.
Here is the critical flaw in Original Medicare: Part B only covers 80 percent of approved outpatient medical costs. You are responsible for the remaining 20 percent—and there is no annual limit on what that 20 percent could cost you. If you require a $100,000 outpatient surgery or expensive chemotherapy infusions, your 20 percent share could quickly drain your retirement savings.
Because Original Medicare lacks an out-of-pocket maximum, relying on it alone is a massive financial hazard. To protect yourself, you must choose one of two secondary coverage paths: Medicare Advantage or a Medicare Supplement policy.

The Medicare Advantage Route: Low Upfront Premiums
Medicare Advantage, also known as Part C, is an all-in-one alternative to Original Medicare. These plans are offered by private insurance companies approved by Medicare. When you enroll in an Advantage plan, you still must pay your standard $202.90 Part B premium, but your medical care is now managed by the private insurer rather than the federal government.
The primary appeal of Medicare Advantage is the upfront price tag. In 2026, the average monthly premium for a Medicare Advantage plan dropped to just $14, with many insurers offering $0 premium options. Furthermore, these plans almost always bundle Part D prescription drug coverage into the policy, and they frequently offer extra perks that Original Medicare ignores—such as routine dental cleanings, vision exams, hearing aids, and even gym memberships.
So, how do insurance companies afford to offer all these benefits for a $0 or $14 premium? They use a pay-as-you-go model and enforce strict network rules.
With Medicare Advantage, you pay a copayment or coinsurance every time you use the healthcare system. You might pay $10 to see your primary care doctor, $45 to see a specialist, $250 for an ambulance ride, and $350 per day for the first five days of a hospital stay. If you remain relatively healthy, your out-of-pocket costs stay extremely low.
To protect you from catastrophic medical bills, all Advantage plans are legally required to have a Maximum Out-of-Pocket limit. According to the National Council on Aging, the government allows Advantage plans to set their out-of-pocket maximum as high as $9,250 for in-network services in 2026. While many plans set their limits lower than the legal maximum, facing a $6,000 or $8,000 bill during a year of heavy medical usage is a very real possibility.
You must also navigate network restrictions. Most Advantage plans are Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) or Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs). If you have an HMO and see a doctor out of your network, you will likely foot the entire bill. If your plan requires prior authorization for an MRI or a specialized surgery, you and your doctor must ask the insurance company for permission before proceeding.

The Medicare Supplement Route: Predictable Coverage
If Medicare Advantage is a pay-as-you-go strategy, Medicare Supplement (Medigap) is a pay-upfront strategy. Medigap policies work alongside Original Medicare to pay the deductibles, copayments, and the dreaded 20 percent coinsurance that Part B leaves behind.
Medigap plans are standardized by the federal government and identified by letters. A Plan G sold by one insurance company offers the exact same medical benefits as a Plan G sold by another company—the only difference is the price and the company’s customer service reputation.
The two most popular Medigap options for retirees today are Plan G and Plan N.
- Medigap Plan G: This is the gold standard of comprehensive coverage. With Plan G, you pay the annual Part B deductible ($283 in 2026). After that deductible is met, Plan G covers 100 percent of your Medicare-approved medical services. You will never see a copay for a doctor visit, a hospital stay, or a surgery. Recent pricing data shows that a 65-year-old typically pays around $165 per month for Plan G, though rates vary based on your zip code and gender.
- Medigap Plan N: If you want lower monthly premiums but still value predictability, Plan N is highly attractive. It averages around $135 per month for a 65-year-old. In exchange for the lower premium, you take on small copayments: up to $20 for doctor visits and up to $50 for emergency room visits that do not result in an inpatient admission.
The greatest advantage of Medigap is absolute freedom. There are no geographic networks to worry about. If a doctor or hospital anywhere in the United States accepts Original Medicare, they must accept your Medigap policy. You do not need referrals to see a specialist, and you do not need prior authorizations from an insurance company to get the care your doctor recommends.
However, Medigap policies do not cover prescription drugs. If you choose this route, you must purchase a standalone Part D prescription drug plan. They also do not include the “extras” like routine dental or vision care.

The Prescription Drug Factor: The 2026 and 2027 Cap
When comparing Advantage and Supplement plans, you must account for the cost of your medications. In the past, retirees with high prescription needs often faced thousands of dollars in annual drug costs. That era is officially over.
Thanks to provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act, the way Medicare handles prescription drugs has fundamentally changed. In 2026, your out-of-pocket costs for covered Part D medications are strictly capped at $2,100 for the entire calendar year. Once you spend $2,100 out of your own pocket, you enter the catastrophic coverage phase, and your plan pays 100 percent of the cost for your covered drugs for the remainder of the year.
This $2,100 cap applies universally—whether you have drug coverage bundled inside a Medicare Advantage plan or you buy a standalone Part D plan to pair with your Medigap policy. Standalone Part D premiums average roughly $34.50 per month in 2026.
Furthermore, the government is now directly negotiating the prices of certain high-cost medications. The first ten negotiated drug prices—impacting major medications for heart disease, diabetes, and blood clots—take effect in 2026. Another fifteen negotiated drugs will take effect in 2027. If you take expensive brand-name medications, these systemic changes provide a vital layer of financial protection regardless of which Medicare path you choose.

Head-to-Head Cost Comparison: Which Saves More?
To determine which system saves you more money in 2027, you have to run the numbers against real-world scenarios. Let us compare the total estimated annual cost for a 65-year-old choosing an average Medicare Advantage plan versus a Medigap Plan G.
We will assume both individuals pay the standard Part B premium of $202.90 per month ($2,434.80 per year).
| Cost Category (2026/2027 Estimates) | Medicare Advantage (Average) | Medicare Supplement (Plan G) |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly Plan Premium | $14/month ($168/year) | $165/month ($1,980/year) |
| Part D (Drug) Premium | Included in plan premium | $34.50/month ($414/year) |
| Annual Fixed Cost (Before Care) | $2,602.80 (Includes Part B) | $4,828.80 (Includes Part B) |
| Annual Medical Deductible | Usually $0 | $283 (Part B Deductible) |
| Maximum Medical Out-of-Pocket Risk | Up to $9,250 (In-network) | $283 (Part B Deductible) |
Scenario 1: The Healthy Year
If you rarely go to the doctor, take inexpensive generic medications, and only utilize preventive care, Medicare Advantage is the clear financial winner. Your total healthcare spending for the year will hover right around your fixed baseline of $2,602.80. The Medigap enrollee, on the other hand, pays nearly $5,000 in fixed premiums regardless of whether they see a doctor or not. In a healthy year, Advantage saves you roughly $2,200.
Scenario 2: The Severe Health Event
Imagine you are diagnosed with a condition that requires multiple specialist visits, a hospital stay, and outpatient rehabilitation. The Medicare Advantage enrollee will pay copays and coinsurance until they hit their plan’s out-of-pocket maximum. If that maximum is $6,500, their total healthcare spending for the year rockets to over $9,100 ($2,602.80 in premiums + $6,500 in medical bills).
The Medigap Plan G enrollee faces a completely different reality. Because Plan G covers 100 percent of approved costs after the $283 deductible, their maximum financial exposure for the year is firmly capped. Their total spending will be roughly $5,111.80 ($4,828.80 in premiums + the $283 deductible). In a bad health year, the Medigap policy saves the retiree thousands of dollars, completely eliminating the stress of unexpected medical debt.
“Original Medicare leaves costly gaps that can add up fast. An accident or illness can undo years of good work.” — Jean Chatzky, Financial Editor and CEO of HerMoney

The Impact of IRMAA on Your Decision
If you have been a diligent saver and have a high income in retirement, you cannot finalize your Medicare budget without factoring in the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA).
The federal government mandates that higher-income retirees pay a surcharge on both their Part B and Part D premiums. According to the Social Security Administration, the government looks at your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) from your tax return two years prior. For 2026 premiums, they evaluate your 2024 tax return. If you file individually and your income was above $109,000—or you file jointly and your income was above $218,000—you will pay an IRMAA surcharge.
For individuals in the highest income brackets, the Part B premium can soar to nearly $690 per month, and the Part D surcharge can add over $90 per month. Because IRMAA applies strictly to Part B and Part D, it impacts you regardless of whether you choose Advantage or Medigap. However, if your baseline fixed costs are heavily inflated by IRMAA, you must carefully evaluate whether you want to add the higher fixed premium of a Medigap plan on top of those surcharges, or if an Advantage plan’s lower premium provides necessary cash flow relief.

What Can Go Wrong: Traps to Avoid
Choosing your coverage path is not something you can easily undo later. Retirees often fall into several predictable traps when setting up their Medicare.
1. The Underwriting Trap
When you first turn 65 and enroll in Medicare Part B, you trigger a six-month window called your Medigap Open Enrollment Period. During this time, insurance companies must sell you any Medigap policy they offer at the best available rate, regardless of your health history. They cannot ask you medical questions or deny you coverage.
Once those six months pass, that federal protection vanishes. If you enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan at age 65, stay in it for three years, and then decide you want the freedom of a Medigap plan because you developed a heart condition, you may be out of luck. In most states, insurance companies can use medical underwriting to evaluate your health. If you have pre-existing conditions, they can legally deny your application or charge you exorbitant premiums. Choosing Advantage early on often locks you into the Advantage system for life.
2. The Zero-Dollar Premium Illusion
Marketing materials push $0 premium Advantage plans relentlessly. But $0 premium does not equal $0 cost. If you select an Advantage plan solely because it is “free” on a monthly basis, you are ignoring the network limitations and the out-of-pocket maximums. Always review a plan’s Summary of Benefits to understand what a hospital stay or an MRI will actually cost you.
3. Ignoring the Drug Formulary
Whether you buy a standalone Part D plan or an Advantage plan, every policy has a specific list of covered drugs called a formulary. Medications are placed into “tiers,” and your copay depends entirely on which tier your drug occupies. A plan with a low monthly premium could end up costing you significantly more if it places your specific medication on an expensive tier, or worse, excludes it from the formulary altogether. Never select a plan without first inputting your current prescription list into the Medicare plan finder tool.

When to Consult a Professional
Medicare rules are dense, and the stakes are high. While many people successfully navigate enrollment on their own, there are specific scenarios where consulting an independent, licensed Medicare broker is highly recommended:
- You are moving to a new state: Medigap pricing structures (attained-age, issue-age, or community-rated) vary drastically by state. A broker can help you navigate local pricing laws and guarantee issue rights.
- You plan to travel extensively: If you plan to spend your winters in Florida and your summers in New York, an Advantage HMO plan will likely restrict your care to emergency rooms only when you travel. A professional can help you evaluate Medigap or national PPO options.
- You are managing chronic health conditions: If you regularly see specialists and require frequent lab work, a broker can run a detailed cost-benefit analysis to determine exactly which route will minimize your annual out-of-pocket exposure.

Next Steps for 2027
There is no universal right answer in the Medicare Advantage vs. Medicare Supplement debate. If maximizing your monthly cash flow is your top priority and you are comfortable working within a network, an Advantage plan can serve you well. If you want to eliminate the stress of unpredictable medical bills and retain the freedom to see any doctor in the country, Medigap is the superior choice.
As you plan for 2027, take a hard look at your savings, your family health history, and your risk tolerance. Build a budget that accounts for the Part B premium, IRMAA surcharges if applicable, and the maximum out-of-pocket risks associated with your preferred path. By making an informed choice today, you protect the retirement nest egg you worked so hard to build.
Last updated: March 2026. This is educational content based on general retirement planning principles. Individual results vary based on your situation. Always verify current benefit amounts, tax laws, and eligibility with official sources like Medicare.gov and the Social Security Administration.