Services
Retirement & Social Security
Medicare Health Plans for Your Needs and Budget
Medicare Advantage Plans
These plans include hospital, medical, and sometimes prescription drug plans and other coverage.
Medicare Supplement Insurance Plans
Also called Medigap, these plans help pay for healthcare costs such as coinsurance, co-pays, and deductibles.
Medicare Part D Plans
Standalone prescription drug plans that offer coverage for medication costs
Medicare Enrollment
Medicare consist of Part A, Part B and Part D. However, A, B, and D have deductibles, coinsurance, and copays. So, you will want to get supplemental insurance to fill the gaps. Medicare Solutions‘ specialty is meeting personal and individual needs with supplemental insurance.
There are many questions Medicare Beneficiaries have.
- How do I sign up?
- At what age do I sign up?
- What if I am still working?
- How does my spouse factor in?
Consult the experts at Medicare Solutions before you make any decisions. Our agent’s priority is helping you to understand your needs and how to meet them. Make knowledgeable decisions today.
Failure to properly understand the rules can lead to costly mistakes that you might not immediately be able to undo.
“Medicare is very complicated and confusing,” said Diane J. Omdahl, co-founder and president of 65 Incorporated, a provider of Medicare software and consulting services. “The people who are turning 65 are at the biggest risk for making mistakes.”
Medicare Disability
A person who has been declared disabled will have to draw a social security check (SSI) for 24 months before becoming automatically enrolled in Medicare. There are a few exceptions to the 24-month waiting period, ESRD and ALS to name a couple. The Medicare Disability Beneficiary can wait until they receive their Medicare Card or contact us 3 months prior to the month Medicare should start.
In addition to helping you with your supplemental needs, Medicare Solutions offers other products and resources:
Do I qualify for
- Extra Help?
- Dental?
- Vision?
- Hearing?
- Transportation?
Retirement & Social Security
Retirement & Social Security
You do not necessarily have to start taking Social Security benefits when you retire or become Medicare eligible. You could retire at 65 and delay your benefits until 69 or 70.
Full Retirement age according to social security is 66 or 67 depending on the year you were born. Full Retirement Age means the age you can receive social security without reduction, full social security.
There are also earning limits while receiving social security benefits before full retirement age. We could go on and on. Medicare Solutions offers insight and Resources to help you navigate your retirement in your economic favor.
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Lucedale, Mississippi 39452