Medicare Part A helps pay for care you receive when you are admitted as an inpatient in a hospital or skilled nursing facility.
Medicare Part A coverage is hospital insurance. It’s one part (or half) of what’s often called Original Medicare, which is administered by the federal government. Medicare Part B (medical insurance) is the other part.
Medicare Part A helps pay for care you receive when you are admitted as an inpatient in a hospital or skilled nursing facility. Costs may not be covered by Part A if you are in the hospital for observation.
What Does Medicare Part A Cover?
Medicare Part A covers the hospital charges and most of the services you receive when you’re in the hospital, however it does not cover the fees charged by doctors who participate in your care while you’re in the hospital. Medicare Part B helps pay those costs. The list below shows examples of what Part A covers.
Medicare Part A covers hospital stays and associated services, including:
- A semi-private room
- Your hospital meals
- Skilled nursing services
- Care on special units, such as intensive care
- Drugs, medical supplies and medical equipment used during your inpatient stay
- Lab tests, X-rays and medical equipment as an inpatient
- Operating room and recovery room services
- Some blood transfusions in a hospital or skilled nursing facility
- Rehabilitation services, including physical therapy received through home health care
- Skilled health care in your homes if you're homebound and only need part-time care
- Care to manage symptoms and control pain for the terminally ill (hospice care)
What Does Medicare Part A Cost?
Medicare Part A shares some costs with you if you need to be hospitalized. The table below shows the different costs that may apply. Costs are shown for 2018.
You do not have to pay a premium for Part A if you or your spouse worked and paid Medicare taxes for at least 10 years.
Premium
If applicable (Up to $437 per month)
Deductible
Per benefit period ($1,364)
Hospital Co-payment
Days 1-60 ($0)
Days 61-90 ($341 per day)
Days 91 and beyond ($682 per day up to 60 *lifetime reserve days)
*Lifetime reserve days: In Medicare Part A, a set number of covered hospital days you can draw on if you are in the hospital longer than 90 days in a benefit period. You have 60 lifetime reserve days. A lifetime reserve day cannot be replaced. When it is used up, it is gone.
Skilled Nursing Facility Co-payment
Skilled Nursing Facility Co-payment
Days 1-20 ($0)
Days 21-100 (Up to $170.50 per day)
Days 101 and beyond (You pay all costs)
Hospice
Medications for pain and symptom management (Up to $5 per prescription) Durable medical equipment used at home (20% of the cost) Respite care (5% of the *Medicare-approved amount)
*Medicare-approved amount: The amount Medicare determines to be reasonable for a covered service. Providers who “accept assignment” agree to accept this amount as payment in full. Providers who accept Medicare but not assignment can charge up to 15% above this amount.
How Medicare Part A Cost Sharing Works
Medicare Part A pays most of the hospital costs for stays up to 60 days. But if you have a very long stay, you could be responsible for a large share of the cost.