The standard Medicare Part B monthly premium
will be $96.40 in 2009, the same as the Part B
premium for 2008. This is the first year since
2000 that there was no increase in the standard
premium over the prior year.
The 2009 Part B premium of $96.40 is the same
as the amount projected in the 2008 Medicare
Trustees Report issued in March. This monthly
premium paid by beneficiaries enrolled in
Medicare Part B covers a portion of the cost of
physicians’ services, outpatient hospital
services, certain home health services, durable
medical equipment, and other items.
By law, the standard premium is set to cover
approximately one-fourth of the average cost of
Part B services incurred by beneficiaries aged
65 and over. The remaining Part B costs are
financed by Federal general revenues. The
income to the program from premiums and general
revenues are paid into the Part B account of the
Supplementary Medical Insurance trust fund, and
Part B expenditures are drawn from this account.
Normally, the Part B premium increases at the
same rate as average Part B expenditures from
year to year. A number of factors explain why
the premium can be kept level for 2009.
Growth is expected in 2009 for most areas of
the Medicare Part B program, including growth in
the cost and use of physician and outpatient
hospital care, home health services,
physician-administered drugs, ambulatory
surgical center services, durable medical
equipment, independent lab and physician’s
office lab services, as well as growth in the
Medicare Advantage program. In most years, this
would result in the need for an increase in the
Part B premium and general revenue financing.
The effect of higher expected Part B costs in
2009, however, is offset by a substantial
reduction in the premium “margin” needed to
maintain an adequate contingency reserve in the
Part B trust fund account. If needed, a portion
of the Part B premium can be used to adjust the
account’s asset level so that it can make up any
shortfall in financing due to
higher-than-expected expenditures. Due to
legislative changes that increased Part B
spending for a year after the financing had been
determined for that year, the assets in the Part
B account of the Supplementary Medical Insurance
trust fund were below the level considered
adequate for the four years
2003-2006. Consequently, Part B premiums and
general revenue financing in recent years have
been set at somewhat higher levels than would
otherwise have been required in order to restore
the contingency reserve to an appropriate
level.
By the end of 2008, the assets in the Part B
account of the SMI trust fund are expected to be
somewhat above an adequate level. For 2008, the
financing goal was for the difference between
Part B assets and liabilities at the end of the
year to represent about 20 percent of the
following year’s expenditures; the actual
percentage is currently estimated to be 24
percent. This level is the result of (1) the
planned increases in the contingency margin
built into the Part B premium for several years,
including 2008, and (2) the restoration of the
Part B account assets for certain Part A hospice
benefits that were inadvertently drawn from the
Part B account. (This latter adjustment resulted
in an increase in Part B assets of $9.3 billion
as of June 30, 2008.) Because of the
more-than-adequate asset level expected at the
end of 2008, no increase is needed in the Part B
premium to maintain an adequate asset level for
2009, and the margin included in prior years for
this purpose can be eliminated.
If actual Part B expenditures are higher than
estimated when the program financing is set, the
Part B assets will be drawn down to make up the
shortfall. The formula specified in current law
will result in a reduction in physician fees of
approximately 20 percent in 2010 and is
projected to cause additional reductions in
subsequent years. For each year from 2003
through 2009, Congress has acted to prevent
physician fee reductions from occurring. In
recognition of the strong possibility of
increases in Part B expenditures that would
result from similar legislative intervention to
override the decreases in physician fees in 2010
or later years, it is appropriate to maintain a
somewhat larger Part B contingency reserve than
would otherwise be necessary. The asset level
projected for the end of 2009 (equivalent to a
reserve ratio of 25 percent of 2010
expenditures) is adequate to temporarily
accommodate this contingency. Such legislation,
however, would raise the future cost of Part B
compared to current law and would necessitate
additional increases in the premium and general
revenue financing after 2009.
As noted, from year to year the monthly Part
B premium and general revenue financing are
adjusted to match increases in program costs and
to maintain an appropriate contingency reserve
in the trust fund. When assets exceed a normal,
adequate level, the premium increase for the
following year can be somewhat lower than would
otherwise be necessary. Since the enactment of
Medicare, there have been five prior years for
which no Part B premium increase was required
because the contingency reserve was more than
adequate.
As required in the Medicare Prescription
Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003, beginning in 2007 the Part B premium a
beneficiary pays each month is based on his or
her annual income. Specifically, if a
beneficiary’s “modified adjusted gross income”
is greater than the legislated threshold amounts
($85,000 in 2009 for a beneficiary filing an
individual income tax return or married and
filing a separate return, and $170,000 for a
beneficiary filing a joint tax return) the
beneficiary is responsible for a larger portion
of the estimated total cost of Part B benefit
coverage. In addition to the standard 25
percent premium, such beneficiaries now have to
pay an income-related monthly adjustment amount.
These income-related Part B premiums have been
phased-in over three years, beginning in 2007.
2009 is the first year in which affected Part B
enrollees will pay the full amount of the
income-related premiums. About 5 percent of
current Part B enrollees are expected to be
subject to the higher premium amounts
The 2009 Part B monthly premium rates to be
paid by beneficiaries who file an individual tax
return (including those who are single, head of
household, qualifying widow[er] with dependent
child, or married filing separately who lived
apart from their spouse for the entire taxable
year), or who file a joint tax return are:
|
Beneficiaries who file an individual tax
return with income: |
Beneficiaries who file a joint tax return
with income: |
Income-related monthly
adjustment amount |
Total monthly premium
amount |
|
Less than
or equal to $85,000 |
Less than
or equal to $170,000 |
$0.00 |
$96.40 |
|
Greater
than $85,000 and less than or equal to
$107,000 |
Greater
than $170,000 and less than or equal to
$214,000 |
$38.50 |
$134.90 |
|
Greater
than $107,000 and less than or equal to
$160,000 |
Greater
than $214,000 and less than or equal to
$320,000 |
$96.30 |
$192.70 |
|
Greater
than $160,000 and less than or equal to
$213,000 |
Greater
than $320,000 and less than or equal to
$426,000 |
$154.10 |
$250.50 |
|
Greater
than $213,000 |
Greater
than $426,000 |
$211.90 |
$308.30 |
In addition, the monthly premium rates to be
paid by beneficiaries who are married, but file
a separate return from their spouse and lived
with their spouse at any time during the taxable
year are:
|
Beneficiaries who are married but file a
separate tax return from their spouse: |
Income-related monthly
adjustment amount |
Total monthly premium
amount |
|
Less than
or equal to $85,000 |
$0.00 |
$96.40 |
|
Greater
than $85,000 and less than or equal to
$128,000 |
$154.10 |
$250.50 |
|
Greater
than $128,000 |
$211.90 |
$308.30 |
Part B Deductible
The Part B deductible was increased to $110
in 2005 and, as a result of the Medicare
Modernization Act, is currently indexed to the
annual percentage increase in the Part B
actuarial rate for aged beneficiaries. In 2009,
the Part B deductible will be $135, the same as
it was in 2008.
Part A Premium and Deductible
Today, CMS is also announcing the Part A
deductible and premium for 2009. Medicare Part
A pays for inpatient hospital, skilled nursing
facility, hospice, and certain home health care
services. The $1,068 deductible for 2009, paid
by the beneficiary when admitted as a hospital
inpatient, is an increase of $44 from $1024 in
2008. The Part A deductible is the
beneficiary’s only cost for up to 60 days of
Medicare-covered inpatient hospital care in a
benefit period. Beneficiaries must pay an
additional $267 per day for days 61 through 90
in 2009, and $534 per day for “lifetime reserve
days” that can be used for hospital stays beyond
the 90th day in a benefit period. The
corresponding amounts for calendar year 2008 are
$256 and $512, respectively. Daily coinsurance
for the 21st through 100th day in a skilled
nursing facility will be $133.50 in 2009, up
from $128 in 2008.
Approximately 99 percent of Medicare
beneficiaries do not have to pay a premium for
Part A services because they have at least 40
quarters of Medicare-covered employment (or are
the spouse or widow[er] of such a person).
However, other seniors and certain people under
age 65 with disabilities who have fewer than 30
quarters of coverage may obtain Part A coverage
by paying a monthly premium set according to a
statutory formula. This premium will be $443
per month for 2009, an increase of $20 from
2008. In addition, seniors with 30 to 39
quarters of coverage, and certain disabled
persons with 30 or more quarters of coverage,
will pay a premium of $244 in 2009, compared to
$233 in 2008.