Skip to content
REMEDIGAP
Get Personalized Help Schedule My Free Call

Start Here

  • What Is Medicare?Start here if you're new
  • Parts A, B, C & D ExplainedThe alphabet, simplified
  • What Medicare CoversWhat's included — and what's not
  • Medicare Costs & PremiumsDeductibles, copays and what you'll actually pay
  • Common Medicare MistakesWhat most people get wrong before it's too late

Your Situation

  • Turning 65 SoonYour enrollment checklist
  • Medicare and Still WorkingWhat to do if you have employer coverage
  • Already on MedicareCan you switch plans?
  • Helping a Parent or SpouseHow to guide someone you love
  • When Can I Sign Up?Enrollment windows and deadlines

Free Medicare Course

Medicare Doesn't Have to Be This Confusing

Get 7 short lessons that explain Medicare in plain English so you can make confident decisions without spending weeks researching online.

  • What Medicare actually covers (and what it doesn't)
  • How to avoid paying for coverage you don't need
  • The enrollment deadlines that matter most
  • How Medigap, Part D, and Advantage really compare
Get Lesson #1 Free → Start Learning Now →

Join 13,000+ Medicare students
No sales calls · No pressure · Unsubscribe anytime

Plan Options

  • Plan GThe most comprehensive Medigap plan available today
  • Plan NLower premium, some cost-sharing
  • Plan G vs. Plan NSide-by-side — which one is right for you?
  • Prescription Drug PlansUnderstanding standalone Part D coverage
  • Medicare Advantage PlansHow they work and what to watch for
  • High-Deductible Plan GLower monthly premium, higher out-of-pocket maximum

How Plans Work

  • Medigap vs. Medicare AdvantageWhich path is right for you?
  • What Medigap CoversFilling Medicare's gaps
  • How Medigap Pricing WorksWhy the same plan costs different amounts
  • Will I Be Denied Coverage?Health questions and underwriting, explained simply
  • When Can I Enroll?Open enrollment windows and your rights
  • Can I Switch to a Medigap Plan?What's possible and when

Free Medigap Review

Get Your Personalized Medigap Comparison

Compare rates from top Medicare Supplement companies side-by-side and find out if you're paying more than you need to.

  • Compare Plan G, N, and High-Deductible G
  • Rates from 10+ top-rated carriers
  • Independent advice with no pressure
  • No obligation to enroll
Compare My Options → See My Rates Now →

100% Free Service · Licensed Nationwide · No Sales Pressure

Our Process

  • How the Process WorksSimple, unhurried and always at your pace
  • No Pressure — Our PromiseWhat we will and won't do when you reach out
  • What Happens After I Enroll?We stay with you after the paperwork
  • Why Use an Independent Agent?More choices, one advisor

Why REMEDIGAP

  • About UsThe story behind a husband-and-wife Medicare agency
  • Why Work With UsWhat makes REMEDIGAP different
  • How We Get PaidFull transparency, no surprises
  • Client Reviews ★★★★★Real families, real experiences

Trusted Nationwide

Why Thousands Trust REMEDIGAP With Their Medicare Decisions

Choosing Medicare is stressful enough. See what real clients say about a team that puts education first and never pressures you into a plan.

Google Reviews ★★★★★
Facebook Reviews ★★★★★
Endorsal Reviews ★★★★★
Read Real Client Stories → See What Clients Say →

Trusted by 1,200+ Clients · 100+ Five-Star Reviews

Learn

  • Free Medicare eCourse7 lessons, plain English, at your own pace
  • Medicare Plans By StateFind the plans available where you live
  • Medicare and Your HealthWhat Medicare covers for specific conditions
  • Understanding Medicare CostsPremiums, deductibles and what you'll actually pay
  • Medicare Supplement CompaniesThe top-rated carriers and how they compare

Tools & Checklists

  • Turning 65 ChecklistEverything to do before your birthday month
  • Medigap Enrollment CalculatorFind your best window to enroll without penalties
  • Initial Enrollment CalculatorSee exactly when your Medicare coverage begins
  • Part B Penalty CalculatorFind out if a late enrollment penalty applies to you
  • Questions to Ask Your AgentSo you get the right plan, not just a plan

Free Medicare Tools

Not Sure When You Need to Enroll? Find Out in Seconds.

Avoid late enrollment penalties and missed deadlines with our free Medicare calculators. A few minutes today could help you avoid costly mistakes that can follow you for years.

  • Find your Medicare enrollment window
  • Check for potential Part B penalties
  • See when your coverage can begin
  • Get answers instantly
Use the Free Tools → Find My Enrollment Window →

Free to Use · No Login Required · Instant Results

REMEDIGAP
    • Plan G
    • Plan N
    • Plan G vs. Plan N
    • Medigap vs. Medicare Advantage
    • High-Deductible Plan G
    • What Is Medicare?
    • Parts A, B, C & D Explained
    • Turning 65 Soon
    • Medicare Costs & Premiums
    • Common Medicare Mistakes
    • How the Process Works
    • No Pressure — Our Promise
    • What Happens After I Enroll?
    • Why Use an Independent Agent?
    • About Us
    • Client Reviews ★★★★★
    • Free Medicare eCourse
    • Medicare Plans By State
    • Medicare Supplement Companies
    • Turning 65 Checklist
    • Medigap Enrollment Calculator
    • Part B Penalty Calculator
    • Questions to Ask Your Agent
PHONE_PLACEHOLDER Get Personalized Help Schedule My Free Call
Home / Medicare Enrollment / Medicare Deadlines and Penalties: The Complete Guide
Medicare Enrollment

Medicare Deadlines and Penalties: The Complete Guide

By:Michael Quinn Published onJune 11, 2026June 12, 2026 Updated onJune 12, 2026

Part 1: The Enrollment Periods You Need to Know

Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)

Your IEP is your first, and often most important, chance to sign up for Medicare. It is a 7-month window:

In this article we’ll discuss:
  • Part 1: The Enrollment Periods You Need to Know
  • Part 2: How the Late Enrollment Penalties Actually Work
  • Quick-Reference Table: Deadlines and Penalties at a Glance
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Bottom Line
  • It begins 3 months before the month you turn 65
  • It includes your birthday month
  • It ends 3 months after the month you turn 65

When your coverage starts depends on when you enroll:

  • Sign up in any of the first 3 months of your IEP: coverage generally starts the month you turn 65 (if your birthday falls on the first of the month, coverage starts the prior month)
  • Sign up the month you turn 65: coverage starts about 1 month after you enroll
  • Sign up 1 month after turning 65: coverage starts about 2 months after you enroll
  • Sign up 2 months after turning 65: coverage starts about 3 months after you enroll

The lesson here is simple: enrolling earlier in your IEP gets your coverage started sooner. Use our initial enrollment calculator to map out your personal dates, and see when to sign up for Medicare for a fuller walkthrough.

General Enrollment Period (GEP)

If you miss your IEP and do not qualify for a Special Enrollment Period, your next chance is the General Enrollment Period, which runs January 1 through March 31 each year.

Two important things to know about the GEP:

  1. Signing up during the GEP can trigger a Part B late enrollment Penalty that generally lasts as long as you have Part B.
  2. Coverage start dates for GEP enrollees have been a point of confusion in recent years due to federal rule changes. Always confirm your specific coverage start date directly with Medicare or Social Security when you enroll during this window, since the timing rules have shifted and the most current guidance should always come from Medicare.gov.

In short: the GEP exists as a safety net, but it is not a window you want to need. It is far better to enroll during your IEP or a qualifying SEP.

Special Enrollment Periods (SEPs)

A Special Enrollment Period lets you sign up for Medicare outside your IEP, often without a penalty, because of specific life circumstances. The most common SEP applies to people who are still working past 65.

The working-past-65 SEP:

If you (or your spouse) have current employer or union group health coverage based on active employment, you can:

  • Sign up for Part A and/or Part B any time while you are covered, or
  • Sign up during an 8-month SEP that begins the month after your employer coverage ends or your employment ends, whichever happens first

Two important catches:

  • COBRA and retiree health coverage do not count as current employment coverage. They will not extend or trigger this SEP.
  • This SEP does not apply if your only other coverage is VA benefits or an individual Marketplace plan, or if you have ESRD.

If you enroll during this SEP, you typically avoid the Part B late enrollment penalty altogether, and your coverage usually begins the month after Social Security receives your completed request.

There is also a notable detail worth remembering: signing up for Part B automatically starts your one-time Medigap Open Enrollment Period, and once it starts, it cannot be paused, changed, or restarted, even if you later drop and re-enroll in Part B.

Other common SEPs cover situations like moving out of your plan’s Service area, losing employer coverage (including COBRA), losing Medicaid eligibility, leaving an institution such as a nursing facility, and several others. Each comes with its own timing window, so if you think you may qualify for one, it is worth confirming the specific rules for your situation.

If you are weighing whether to delay enrollment while still working, read our guide on Medicare mistakes to avoid when working past 65 and do you have to sign up for Medicare at 65 if you’re still working.

Yearly Enrollment Windows for Medicare Advantage and Part D

Beyond your initial enrollment, there are two recurring annual windows to know:

  • Medicare Open Enrollment Period: October 15 through December 7. During this window, you can join, switch, or drop Medicare Advantage Plans and Part D drug plans, or move between Original Medicare and Medicare Advantage. Changes take effect January 1.
  • Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period: January 1 through March 31. This applies only if you are already in a Medicare Advantage plan. It allows one change: switching to a different MA plan, or dropping MA to return to Original Medicare (and picking up a stand-alone Part D plan). You cannot use this window to move from Original Medicare into an MA plan.

Part 2: How the Late Enrollment Penalties Actually Work

This is the part most people find confusing, so let’s slow down and walk through each one with simple math.

Part A Late Enrollment Penalty

Most people get Part A Premium-free because they or their spouse paid Medicare taxes for at least 10 years of work. If that describes you, there is no Part A penalty, ever, no matter when you sign up.

The penalty only applies to the smaller group of people who must buy Part A and do not sign up when first eligible.

How it is calculated:

  • Your monthly premium increases by 10%
  • You pay that higher premium for twice the number of years you were eligible but did not enroll

Worked example: Suppose someone was eligible to buy Part A for 2 years but did not enroll. They would pay the 10% surcharge for 4 years (twice the 2-year delay) before the penalty goes away.

Part B Late Enrollment Penalty

This is the penalty that affects the largest number of people, and it can be permanent.

How it is calculated:

  • Your premium increases by 10% for each full 12-month period you were eligible for Part B but did not enroll (and did not qualify for an SEP)
  • In most cases, you pay this penalty for as long as you have Part B

Worked example: Imagine someone became eligible for Part B in July and did not enroll until about two and a half years later. That gap rounds down to 2 full 12-month periods, so the penalty would be 10% x 2, or 20% added to the standard Part B premium, for as long as they have Part B.

You can estimate your own potential exposure with our Part B penalty calculator.

The best way to avoid this penalty is to enroll during your IEP, or to make sure you genuinely qualify for the working-past-65 SEP before you decide to delay.

Part D Late Enrollment Penalty

This penalty applies if you go 63 or more consecutive days without Part D coverage or other “creditable” Prescription Drug Coverage after your Initial Enrollment Period ends. Creditable coverage means coverage that is expected to pay, on average, at least as much as standard Medicare drug coverage, such as many employer or union drug plans, TRICARE, VA coverage, or Indian Health Service coverage.

How it is calculated:

1% of the “national base beneficiary premium” x the number of full months you went without creditable coverage, rounded to the nearest $0.10, then added permanently to your monthly Part D premium

The national base beneficiary premium is a figure set by Medicare that can change from year to year, which means your penalty amount can shift slightly over time even though the percentage you owe stays fixed.

Worked example: Suppose someone went 14 months without creditable drug coverage. Using a base premium figure in the high $30s as an example: 14% of that amount comes out to roughly $5 per month, rounded to the nearest dime, added on top of their regular Part D plan premium, for as long as they have Part D coverage.

Because the base premium changes each year, the exact dollar amount of any penalty should always be confirmed using the current year’s figure at Medicare.gov. Our Part D penalty calculator can help you estimate your situation using up-to-date figures.

One important exception: people who qualify for Extra Help with Medicare drug costs do not pay a Part D late enrollment penalty.


Quick-Reference Table: Deadlines and Penalties at a Glance

Enrollment WindowTimingWhat Happens If You Miss It
Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)7 months: 3 months before your birthday month, your birthday month, and 3 months afterMay lead to delayed coverage and Part B/Part D penalties
General Enrollment Period (GEP)January 1 to March 31 each yearYour only fallback if you missed your IEP and have no SEP; can trigger a Part B penalty
Working-past-65 SEPWhile covered by active employer/union group coverage, or an 8-month window after that coverage or employment endsLosing this window may mean waiting for the GEP and facing a penalty
Medigap Open EnrollmentOne-time, 6-month window starting when you have Part B and are 65+Loss of guaranteed-issue protections in most states
Medicare Open Enrollment (MA/Part D)October 15 to December 7 annuallyStuck with your current plan until the next window (barring a qualifying SEP)
MA Open Enrollment PeriodJanuary 1 to March 31 annually (MA enrollees only)Limited to one plan change for the year
Part D creditable coverage window63 consecutive days without creditable drug coveragePermanent monthly penalty added to your Part D premium

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Part B late enrollment penalty really permanent?
In most cases, yes. If you do not qualify for a Special Enrollment Period and you enroll late, the 10%-per-12-months penalty generally applies for as long as you have Part B.

I am still working at 65. Do I need to sign up for Medicare right now?
Not necessarily. If you have current group health coverage through an employer with 20 or more employees, you may be able to delay Part B without penalty and enroll later during your 8-month Special Enrollment Period. COBRA and retiree coverage do not count for this purpose, so it is worth double-checking your situation. See our guide on Medicare mistakes when working past 65.

What counts as “creditable” drug coverage for Part D purposes?
Coverage that is expected to pay, on average, at least as much as standard Medicare drug coverage. Many employer and union plans, TRICARE, VA coverage, and Indian Health Service coverage qualify. Your plan administrator can confirm whether your coverage is considered creditable.

Can I avoid the General Enrollment Period altogether?
Yes, by enrolling during your Initial Enrollment Period or a qualifying Special Enrollment Period. The GEP exists as a backup option, but it often comes with penalties and a wait for coverage to begin.

Where can I find my personal enrollment dates?
Our enrollment deadline calculator and initial enrollment calculator can help you map out your specific windows based on your birthday and work situation.


Bottom Line

Medicare’s deadlines can feel like a maze, but they boil down to a few key ideas: know your Initial Enrollment Period, understand whether a Special Enrollment Period applies to you, and avoid the late penalties by acting during the right window.

The penalties themselves are not designed to be punishments. They are designed to encourage people to enroll when they are first eligible, which keeps the overall system stable. Once you understand the formulas, they are not nearly as mysterious as they sound.

If you would like a second set of eyes on your specific timeline, before any deadlines pass, schedule a free Medicare consultation with REMEDIGAP. A licensed advisor can help you map your exact dates and avoid costly mistakes.


This article is for educational purposes only and is not personalized financial, legal, or medical advice. Enrollment rules, premium amounts, and penalty calculations can change from year to year. Always confirm current figures and rules at Medicare.gov or with the Social Security Administration before making enrollment decisions.

💡 Your next step: Your Medicare enrollment window is the best time to get Medigap — no medical Underwriting required. Compare Medicare Supplement plans before your window closes.


Related Articles

  • Medicare Enrollment – What You Need To Know.
  • 10 Biggest Mistakes People Make When Picking a Medicare Plan
  • 5 Things to Do After You Get Your Medicare Card
  • Can You Get Medicare Without Social Security? Yes, Here’s How
  • COBRA and Medigap: Key Differences You Need to Know
Michael Quinn

Michael Quinn is a licensed Medicare insurance expert and cofounder of REMEDIGAP. With over a decade of experience, he helps people compare coverage options with clear, unbiased guidance. His insights have been featured by USA Today, NerdWallet and many other publications.

  • Author
  • Fact checked

About the author

[molongui_author_box]

michael quinn insurance

Content Editor

Michael Quinn

Michael Quinn is a licensed Medicare insurance expert and cofounder of REMEDIGAP. With over a decade of experience, he helps people compare coverage options with clear, unbiased guidance. His insights have been featured by USA Today, NerdWallet and many other publications.

Learn more

Written by Michael Quinn
Licensed Broker, REMEDIGAP Founder

Fact Checked by Joann Quinn
Chief Compliance Officer

Fact Checked

As a licensed insurance broker, REMEDIGAP upholds the principles of integrity in our editorial standards and ensures transparency in how we receive compensation from our insurance partners.

Medicare made simple with REMEDIGAP
Free Medicare eCourse
GET THE
#1
MEDICARE COURSE
FREE
today
TK
Tom K.

"Mike & Joann do an incredible job of sorting out the quagmire of Medicare and making it simple for me to understand."

AM
Anne M.

"I couldn't have made the right decisions without Joann and Michael at REMEDIGAP. I now have 'peace of mind.'"

Get Instant Access Send Me Lesson 1
A-Rated Carriers
COMPARE
MEDICARE SUPPLEMENT
PLANS
for free
1,300+ Medicare families helped
WH
Wayne H. ★★★★★

"Joann was very helpful, took time to explain all options. Thanks to her my brother saved $300/mo in premiums."

JR
Jojo R. ★★★★★

"Joann Quinn saved the day! She reached out and asked if we'd like to save $200/mo with the same benefits."

Get My Free Quote See My Plan Options

Talk with a Medicare expert

Schedule a free call by clicking below or call us now at
888-411-1329

Get Personalized Help

Resources

  • Calculators
  • Blog

Popular

  • Testimonials
  • Video

About

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Licenses

Get Instant Medicare Supplement Plan Rates Now

Compare Top Plans in Your Area for Free - Act Now!

Compare Plans Today!

Not connected with or endorsed by the United States government or the federal Medicare program

We do not offer every plan available in your area. Any information we provide is limited to those plans we do offer in your area. Please contact Medicare.gov or 1-800-MEDICARE to get information on all of your options. Medicare has neither reviewed nor endorsed this information. Not connected with or endorsed by the United States government or the federal Medicare program. While we have done our best to ensure all rates shown are accurate, human error is possible. In the rare event of a pricing mistake, the carrier’s rates will always supersede whatever price appears on our website.

REMEDIGAP.com is privately owned & operated by The Quinn Group, LLC. Licensed name varies by state: The Quinn Group LLC, Quinn Insurance Services, Quinn Premier Insurance Services

© 2026 REMEDIGAP | All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy