2026 Rates Updated February 2026

Medicare Plan G Cost in 2026: A Complete Breakdown by Age, State & Rate Factors

By Paul B-Independent Medicare Broker-18 Years Experience- Updated February 2026

If you're researching Plan G, you've probably already seen wildly different premium quotes and aren't sure why. This guide explains exactly what Plan G costs, why premiums vary so much, and everything you need to decide if it's the right fit no fluff, no sales spin.

The Modern Medicare Starter Guide

New to Medicare? Start Here.

Everything you need to know about Medicare Parts A, B, C, and D — enrollment periods, 2026 costs, penalties to avoid, and a glossary of key terms.

Medicare Advantage Made Simple

Understanding Your MA Options

HMO, PPO, PFFS, SNP & MSA — all 5 plan types explained. Side-by-side Original Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage comparison, costs, rights, and enrollment windows.

Medicare Supplement Made Simple

Your Medigap Guide

All 10 standardized plan letters decoded, Plan G vs Plan N vs HD Plan G, the enrollment window you can’t miss, birthday rule, and New York special protections

My Medicare Planner

Your Personal Organizer

Keep all your Medicare information in one place — doctors, prescriptions, hospitals, pharmacies, enrollment dates, and questions for your broker.

What You'll Find on This Page

  1. What is Medicare Plan G?
  2. Exactly What Plan G Covers in 2026
  3. Plan G Cost Breakdown: Averages by Age & State
  4. The 7 Factors That Determine Your Premium
  5. High Deductible Plan G: The Underrated Option
  6. Plan G vs. Plan N vs. Plan F
  7. Plan G in New York: What Makes It Different
  8. Real-World Cost Scenarios
  9. When to Enroll (This Is Critical)
  10. Is Plan G Worth the Cost?
  11. Frequently Asked Questions

What Everyone Pays for Medicare in 2026

Medicare Plan G is a Medigap supplement plan a private insurance policy you add on top of Original Medicare (Parts A and B). Its job is to cover most of the costs that Original Medicare leaves behind: the hospital deductible, coinsurance, copays, and the 20% that Medicare doesn’t pay for outpatient services.
Since Plan F was phased out for new enrollees in 2020, Plan G has become the most comprehensive Medigap plan available if you’re turning 65 or new to Medicare. The only cost it doesn’t cover is the Medicare Part B annual deductible -$283 in 2026.
After you pay that one deductible, Plan G and Medicare together cover 100% of all approved medical costs for the rest of the year. Doctor visits, hospital stays, specialists, outpatient surgery, skilled nursing care all of it.
The simple version: Once you’ve paid your $283 Part B deductible for the year, your only regular healthcare expense is your monthly Plan G premium. No copays. No coinsurance. No surprise bills for Medicare-covered services.

Exactly What Medicare Plan G Covers in 2026

Plan G benefits are standardized by the federal government. The coverage is identical no matter which insurance company sells it to you. The only thing that varies is the monthly premium.
Coverage Item 2026 Amount / Details Covered by Plan G?
Medicare Part A hospital deductible $1,736 per benefit period 100%
Part A coinsurance (hospital days 61-90) $434/day in 2026 100%
Part A coinsurance (days 91+, lifetime reserve) $868/day in 2026 100%
Extra 365 hospital days beyond lifetime reserve After Medicare benefits end 100%
Skilled nursing facility coinsurance (days 21- $217 50/day in 2026 100%
Part A hospice care coinsurance/copays Varies 100%
Part B coinsurance (the 20% Medicare doesn't pay) 20% of all approved outpatient services 100% (after Part B deductible)
Part B excess charges Up to 15% above Medicare rate 100%
First 3 pints of blood Per year 100%
Foreign travel emergency care 80% up to $50,000 lifetime After $250 deductible
Medicare Part B deductible $283 in 2026 X You pay this
Prescription drugs (Part D) Requires separate Part D plan X Not covered
Dental, vision, hearing Medicare doesn't cover these X Not covered
Important note on Part B excess charges: these are fees a doctor can legally charge above the Medicare-approved rate – up to 15% more. Plan G covers those completely. Plan N does not. In New York, state law caps excess charges at 5% above the Medicare-approved rate, so the practical exposure for NY residents is very low – but Plan G still provides complete protection.

Medicare Plan G Cost in 2026: Averages by Age & State

There’s no single Plan G rate. Your premium depends on several factors. Here are realistic 2026 ranges based on actual market data.

National Average Monthly Premiums by Age

Typical market ranges for a nonsmoker in most states (attained-age rated). New York is listed separately – community rating means age doesn’t change your rate.
Age / Profile Typical Monthly Cost Why It Varies
65-Female, nonsmoker $130-$200/month Lowest-cost entry point; gender discounts apply in most states
65-Male, nonsmoker $150-$220/month Males typically pay $15-$40 more than females at the same age
70 $180- $260/month Attained-age plans increase each birthday, issue-age plans are locked
75 $220-$310/month Premium growth accelerates in attained-age states
80 $270- $380/month Significant spread between cheapest and most expensive carrier
New York (any age) $314- $840+/month Community-rated: age doesn't matter, but carrier choice matters enormously. AARP/UHC $372 vs. Bankers Conseco $840+
Why the wide ranges? In the same zip code, two different insurance companies can quote you $80-$120 apart for identical Plan G coverage. The benefits are exactly the same. Only the price differs. This is why shopping across carriers – or working with an independent broker can save you real money every month.

Plan G Rates by State (2026 Estimates)

State / Region Approx. Monthly Premium (Age 65) Notes
New York $314-$840+/month Most expensive state nationally. Community-rated. Cheapest upstate: Transamerica $314. Long Island/NYC: AARP/UHC $372; Bankers Conseco $840+
Florida $180-$449 Wide range; carrier and county vary significantly
California $140-$300+ Birthday Rule allows annual plan switching
Texas $140-$220 Competitive market; some carriers very aggressive
New Jersey $131-$350+/month Attained/issue-age rated (NOT community-rated like NY). Starting rates as low as $131/month at 65
North Carolina $130-$230 Generally competitive market
South Carolina $120-$200 Among lowest rates nationally
Illinois / Midwest $130- $210 Generally moderate pricing
National Average (age 65) -$165-$200 Attained-age states, nonsmoker
These are representative ranges, not guarantees. Your actual quote will reflect your specific zip code, the carrier, and the rating method they use.

The 7 Factors That Determine Your Plan G Premium

Plan G coverage is standardized. Plan G pricing is not. Here’s what insurance companies actually look at when they calculate your rate.

1. How the Insurance Company Prices the Plan (Rating Method)

This is the most important factor most people don’t know to ask about. There are three pricing methods, and the differences compound significantly over 10 to 20 years.
Pricing Method How It Works Long-Term Impact
Community-Rated Same price for everyone regardless of age Premiums don't rise because of your age only due to inflation and claims trends
Issue-Age-Rated Premium is locked to your age at enrollment Lower long-term increases than attained-age; rewards enrolling early
Attained-Age-Rated Premium rises every year as you get older Cheapest at 65, but often most expensive by 75-80; most common nationally

New York residents:

New York is a community-rated state, meaning your age has zero effect on your Medigap premium. A 65-year-old and an 80-year-old with the same plan from the same carrier pay the same rate.

2. Your Age at Enrollment

In attained-age states (most of the country), your premium at 65 is your baseline and it climbs from there. By 75, you can expect to pay significantly more. This is why timing your enrollment during your open enrollment window matters so much.

3. Your State and Zip Code

Healthcare costs, state insurance regulations, and the number of competing carriers all influence what you pay. Nine states require community rating – AR, CT, ID, MA, ME, MN, NY, VT, and WA. New Jersey is not community-rated; it uses attained/issue-age pricing. Separately, 14 states have Birthday Rule windows that allow annual plan-switching without underwriting.

4. Your Gender

In most states, women pay lower Plan G premiums than men of the same age. The difference can be $10 to $40 per month in some markets.

5. Tobacco Use

Tobacco users typically pay 10 to 20% more for the same Plan G coverage. Most insurers ask about tobacco use within the past 12 months.

6. Which Insurance Company You Choose

In a single zip code, I regularly see quotes that differ by $60 to $100 per month. The cheapest isn’t always the best long-term choice if that company has a history of aggressive rate increases. Carrier stability and rate history matter.

7. Household or Spousal Discounts

Many carriers offer discounts of 5 to 15% if you and your spouse both enroll with the same company. These are worth asking about.

High Deductible Plan G: The Underrated Option Worth Knowing About

If you want Plan G’s nationwide freedom and coverage structure but want to pay significantly less per month, High Deductible Plan G deserves a real look. I consider it one of Medicare’s most underutilized options.
It works exactly like standard Plan G same benefits, same nationwide access, same rules except you pay a $2,950 deductible in 2026 before the plan starts covering costs. In exchange, your monthly premium drops dramatically.
Feature Standard Plan G High Deductible Plan G
Monthly premium (age 65, avg.) -$165-$200/month -$40-$111/month nationally
Annual deductible $0 (Part B deductible only: $283) $2,950 in 2026
Coverage after threshold met 100% of Medicare-approved costs 100% of Medicare-approved costs
Nationwide doctor access Yes Yes
Annual premium saving vs. standard ..... -$1,300–$1,900/year
Best for Frequent care, predictability seekers Healthy, financially flexible, savings-minded

Here’s a simple way to think about it: High Deductible Plan G can save you $600 to $1,900+ per year compared to standard Plan G. At $2,950, most healthy beneficiaries don’t come close to a break-even point in most years.

Important: Not all states offer High Deductible Plan G — availability varies. High Deductible Plan G is not available in New York due to community rating regulations. Check with a broker for availability in your specific state.

Plan G vs. Plan N vs. Plan F: How to Choose

Most people in 2026 are comparing these three plans. Here’s the honest breakdown.

Feature Plan G Plan N Plan F
Available to new Medicare enrollees? Yes Yes No (pre-2020 only)
Part B deductible covered? No ($283 you pay) No ($283 you pay) Yes
Part B coinsurance covered? 100% 100% (with copays) 100%
Part B excess charges covered? Yes No Yes
Doctor visit copays? None Up to $20 None
ER visit copays? None Up to $50 (if not admitted) None
Part A deductible covered? Yes ($1,736) Yes ($1,736) Yes ($1,736)
Monthly premium (approx. age 65) $165–$200 $120–$160 $180–$230 (if available)

Plan N often looks appealing because of the lower premium. For many healthy people who don’t see specialists frequently, it absolutely can be the right choice. But keep in mind: Plan N doesn’t cover Part B excess charges, and the $20 copay applies to every office visit. If you see a specialist six times a year, that’s $120 in copays — which starts to close the premium gap with Plan G quickly.

 

In New York specifically:

Excess charges don’t apply under state law, so the main Plan G advantage over Plan N is zero office visit copays. Many of my New York clients who don’t visit the doctor frequently find Plan N saves $30–$50 per month with very little downside.

Medicare Plan G in New York: What Makes It Different

If you’re in New York — including Long Island, NYC, Westchester, or anywhere in the state — your Medigap experience is fundamentally different from most other states. And in many ways, it’s better.

Community Rating: Age Doesn’t Affect Your Premium

In New York, all Medigap premiums are community-rated. Every person enrolled in the same plan from the same carrier in the same region pays the same monthly premium, regardless of age or health status.

Guaranteed Issue Rights: Available Year-Round

New York has true year-round guaranteed issue rights. New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts are among the very few states with continuous year-round Medigap access — insurers must sell you any plan they offer regardless of health history, at any time of year.

Plan G Rates in New York by Region (2026)

NY Region Approx. Monthly Premium Notes
Long Island (zip 110, 115–119) $372 – $840+/month Same rate tier as NYC Proper. AARP/UHC $372; Aetna $406; Transamerica $444; Mutual of Omaha $511; Humana $647; Bankers Conseco $840
NYC Proper (all 5 boroughs) $372 – $840+/month Most expensive region; AARP/UHC $372; Aetna $406; Mutual of Omaha $511; Bankers Conseco $840
Westchester (zip 105–109) $372 – $840+/month Same premium band as NYC Proper
Mid-Hudson (zip 124–127) $336 – $666+/month AARP/UHC $336; Transamerica $366; Bankers Conseco $666
Albany / Capital Region (zip 120–123, 128–129) $314 – $664+/month AARP/UHC $342; Transamerica $314 (lowest in state); Humana $441; Bankers Conseco $660
Buffalo / Western NY (zip 140–143, 147) $314 – $666+/month Similar to Albany band; AARP/UHC $336; Transamerica $314

Important: No carrier in New York offers Plan G below $264/month in any region in 2026. The $81 figure sometimes cited online is for High Deductible Plan F — a completely different, limited-availability plan.

These are official rates published by the New York Department of Financial Services (DFS), effective February 1, 2026. The gap between the cheapest and most expensive carrier for identical Plan G coverage can exceed $300/month in the same region. This is exactly why having a broker compare all available carriers for your specific zip code matters so much in New York.

Real-World Cost Scenarios: What Plan G Actually Costs Year to Year

The premium is only part of the picture. Here’s what Plan G actually looks like in practice.

Scenario 1: A Healthy Year

Two primary care visits, routine labs, no hospitalization.

Plan G premium: $175 Ă— 12 = $2,100
Part B premium: $209.90 Ă— 12 = $2,518.80
Part B deductible: $283
Part D plan: $35 Ă— 12 = $420

Total: ~$5,327

Scenario 2: A Moderate Year

One outpatient surgery, specialist visits, one brief hospitalization.

Plan G premium: $2,100
Part B premium: $2,518.80
Part B deductible: $283
Surgery, hospital, specialists: $0
Part D plan: $420

Total: ~$5,327

Without Plan G

Same moderate year with Original Medicare only.

Part B premium: $2,518.80
Part A hospital deductible: $1,736
20% coinsurance on $40K: $8,000
Specialist copays: varies

Total: $12,000+

Plan G converts unpredictable medical bills into a predictable monthly premium. Whether that trade is worth it depends on your health, your savings cushion, and how you handle financial uncertainty.

When to Enroll in Plan G (This Is Critical)

Timing is everything with Medigap. This is one of the most important things I tell every person I work with.

Your Medigap Open Enrollment Window

You have a one-time, six-month open enrollment window that begins on the first day of the month you turn 65 and are enrolled in Medicare Part B. During this window:

Once this window closes, most states allow insurers to use medical underwriting if you apply for a new Medigap plan. That means they can deny you, exclude conditions, or charge you more based on health history.

States With Additional Protections

New York residents:

Even if you missed your original enrollment window years ago, you can get Plan G today. New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts are among the very few states with continuous year-round guaranteed issue — no medical underwriting, no denial, any time of year.

Is Medicare Plan G Worth the Cost?

The honest answer: it depends on three things — your health, your financial cushion, and your relationship with uncertainty.

Plan G tends to be worth it if you:

Plan G may be unnecessary if you:

One important long-term consideration: even if you don’t need Plan G much at 65, your health needs will likely increase over time. The best time to enroll is during your open enrollment window, when you have guaranteed acceptance and the best rates. Switching later in most states requires passing medical underwriting — and by then your health situation may have changed.

There’s no quiz that gives you a perfect answer. But honest answers to these questions usually point you in a clear direction.

If paying an extra $150–$300+ per month feels genuinely difficult, Medicare Advantage is worth a serious look. That savings adds up quickly over a year. If you can comfortably absorb that monthly cost, Medigap is a realistic option worth comparing.

If the idea of surprise medical bills stresses you out, Medigap’s predictable cost structure tends to feel more comfortable. You pay more monthly, but you know what to expect. If you’re okay with paying less most of the year and handling higher costs only when you actually need care, Medicare Advantage can make a lot of sense.

If yes, Medigap’s predictability may offer genuine peace of mind. If no — if you have savings or financial flexibility — Medicare Advantage’s out-of-pocket cap may be sufficient protection.

 

If you’re frequently away from home or split time between states, Medigap’s nationwide access to any Medicare provider is a significant advantage. Medicare Advantage networks are typically regional and may offer limited out-of-area coverage.

With Medigap, if your doctor accepts Medicare, you can keep seeing them — period. With Medicare Advantage, you’ll need to confirm your specific doctors are in the plan’s network before enrolling.

With Medigap, if your doctor accepts Medicare, you can keep seeing them — period. With Medicare Advantage, you’ll need to confirm your specific doctors are in the plan’s network before enrolling.

Medicare Advantage plans can change their networks, copays, drug coverage, and extra benefits every year. If you’re comfortable doing an annual review during the fall enrollment period, this isn’t a big deal. If you’d rather set it and forget it, Medigap tends to be more stable from year to year.

In most states, Medigap premiums increase as you age, and may also rise due to general healthcare inflation. Over 10 to 15 years, this can add up meaningfully. Medicare Advantage premiums tend to be more stable year to year — though plan benefits can shift.

Want Help Figuring Out Which Path Makes Sense for You?

I'm Paul — an independent Medicare broker with 18 years of experience helping people just like you sort through these options. I represent 40+ carriers across 34 states, which means I'm not locked into any one company.

I offer free, no-pressure Medicare consultations. We'll look at your doctors, your prescriptions, your location, and your budget — and I'll walk you through your real options clearly and honestly. No sales pitch. No rush. Just the information you need to decide with confidence.

Paul B Insurance • The Modern Medicare Agency • Licensed in 34+ States • 5,000+ Clients Helped

Scroll to Top

Starter Guide

Medicare Advantage Plans

Medicare Supplement

Medicare Planner

Request a Callback with
Paul Barrett

Fill out the form below, and we'll call you within 24 hours.