Medicare Versus Medicaid: What Each Program Covers and When
This May is National Elder Law Awareness Month. When discussing senior benefits, two of the most important, and often confused, benefits are Medicare and Medicaid. While people will speak of them interchangeably, they are very different and cover different needs. Medicare focuses on your immediate medical and short-term hospital needs, while Medicaid acts as the government safety net for seniors needing long-term skilled nursing care. Medicare covers things like prescription drugs and doctor visits, but it does not cover long-term skilled nursing care.
What Is Medicare?
Medicare is designed to provide healthcare stability for the following individuals:
People 65 or older
Younger people with specific disabilities
Individuals with end-stage renal disease (permanent kidney failure)
Medicare is a federal entitlement program that you have typically paid into through your working life. It is available to almost everyone 65 or older regardless of how much money they have. It provides a core level of support for seniors, but it is not a catchall. Medicare does not cover long-term skilled nursing care.
Understanding the Parts of Medicare
The Medicare program is divided into four main parts, each addressing different aspects of healthcare. Here is a breakdown of what you can expect each to cover.
Medicare Part A: Hospital Insurance
Part A is designed to cover acute, inpatient needs. After you have paid the deductible per benefit period, it covers the following services:
Inpatient hospital care (does not cover patients in observation status)
Short-term skilled nursing facility care (copays up to 100 days)
Hospice care
Limited home healthcare
Medicare Part B: Medical Insurance
Part B is where you will find coverage for your outpatient needs—the services you use most frequently.
What it covers
Doctor visits
Outpatient care
Preventive services (vaccines, screenings)
Durable medical equipment (wheelchairs, walkers, etc.)
Medicare Part C: Medicare Advantage
Medicare Part C, commonly known as Medicare Advantage, is effectively a private version of Medicare. Instead of the federal government paying your doctors directly, they pay a private insurance company to manage your care. It combines Parts A, B, and often D and offers other benefits like vision, dental, and hearing, which are not found in traditional Medicare. Typical network rules apply, so you will have to ensure that your preferred providers are in network with your insurance company before you purchase Part C. These plans also require your provider to seek prior authorization from the insurance company before you have certain surgeries, MRIs, or specialized treatments.
Medicare Part D: Prescription Drugs
Medicare Part D offers coverage for certain outpatient prescription drugs. Part D is managed by private companies that charge monthly premiums and enforce deductibles.
What Medicare Does NOT Cover
The single biggest misconception about Medicare is what it covers when it comes to long-term care. MEDICARE DOES NOT COVER LONG-TERM CARE. If you need a nursing home for months or years (beyond the short-term skilled care covered by Part A), Medicare will not pay. If you are looking for assistance with these costs, you must consider other options, like Medicaid, if you qualify, or private long-term care insurance.
What Is Medicaid?
Medicaid is a joint federal and state program that provides health coverage to millions of Americans. Most relevantly, Medicaid covers the cost of long-term skilled nursing care for people who need it and meet the program’s financial eligibility requirements.
What Long-Term Care Medicaid Covers
Long-term Medicaid provides a broad range of health services, including those not covered by Medicare, most notably:
Long-term care. Medicaid is the largest payer for long-term care services in the country, covering both nursing home care, assisted living care, and home- and community-based services (HCBS) that help individuals stay in their homes.
Inpatient and outpatient hospital services
Doctor and clinic services
Prescription drugs (Medicaid can help cover Part D premiums and copays for those eligible for both, known as dual eligibles).
Vision, dental, and hearing (coverage varies significantly by state, unlike Medicare Advantage).
Eligibility Requirements for Long-Term Care Medicaid
Medicaid eligibility for those needing long-term care is complex and determined primarily at the state level, but it generally includes the following:
Financial limits (income and resources). Both your income and your total countable assets (like savings, but typically excluding your primary home and car) must fall below certain limits. These limits vary by state and by specific Medicaid eligibility categories (e.g., elderly, disabled).
Category. You must fit into a recognized category, such as being aged 65 or older, blind, or disabled.
Residency and citizenship. You must be a resident of the state in which you are applying and a US citizen or an eligible noncitizen.
Determining how long term care costs, such as nursing home costs will be paid is complex and should be done well in advance of the time when the need arises. If you have questions about long term care planning, please contact us.
This post is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact an attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing herein creates an attorney-client relationship between Hallock & Hallock and the reader.