UTAH · 2026 GUIDE

Medicare Supplement (Medigap) Plans in Utah: The Plain-English 2026 Guide

Original Medicare covers a lot — but after it pays its share, you’re responsible for deductibles and, more importantly, 20% of most medical bills with no annual limit. No cap. If a serious illness racks up $200,000 in covered charges, your 20% is $40,000 — and Original Medicare alone will not stop the bleeding at any point.

That uncapped 20% is the entire reason Medicare Supplement insurance — better known as Medigap — exists. A Medigap plan works alongside Original Medicare and pays the gaps it leaves behind. With the most popular plan in Utah, your medical out-of-pocket for the entire year can be as little as the $283 Part B deductible — while you keep the freedom to see any doctor or hospital in the country that accepts Medicare. No networks, no referrals, no prior authorizations.

This guide covers Medigap in Utah specifically: Plan G vs Plan N, real 2026 costs, the pricing methods that decide how your premium ages, the one 6-month window when you can’t be turned down, Utah’s brand-new birthday rule, and the switching trap that catches people who start with Medicare Advantage.

📺 Watch the video below, or keep reading.

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THE BASICS

What Is a Medicare Supplement (Medigap) Plan?

A Medicare Supplement plan is private insurance that fills the gaps in Original Medicare — the deductibles, coinsurance, and copays Medicare passes on to you. It does not replace your Medicare; it pays after Medicare pays.

The key contrast: Medicare Advantage replaces the delivery of your Medicare benefits through a private plan with its own network and rules. Medigap keeps Original Medicare as your primary coverage and simply pays the leftover bills. Two completely different structures — and you can’t have both at once.

When you visit a doctor: the provider bills Medicare → Medicare pays its 80% → your Medigap plan automatically pays its share → you pay little or nothing. No claim forms, no network check, no asking permission.

Medigap plans are standardized by the federal government into lettered plans. A Plan G from one company is identical in benefits to a Plan G from any other — the only differences are price and the company’s rate-increase history. So you’re never comparing benefits; you’re comparing carriers. (That’s exactly the comparison an independent broker runs for you across every carrier at once.)

WHAT'S COVERED

What Do Medigap Plans Cover?

And the structural benefits every Medigap plan shares:

Any doctor, anywhere

Every U.S. provider that accepts Medicare accepts your plan. No networks.

No referrals or prior auth

If Medicare approves it, your plan pays its share. Period.

Nationwide coverage

The same in St. George, Salt Lake, or out of state.

Guaranteed renewable

Pay the premium and you can never be cancelled for health.

Not covered: prescription drugs (you’ll add a separate Part D plan), dental, vision, hearing, or fitness benefits — more on that below.

THE ONLY COMPARISON MOST PEOPLE NEED

Plan G vs. Plan N

Ten lettered plans exist, but if you’re new to Medicare, two letters cover the realistic shortlist. (Plan F closed to anyone newly eligible after January 1, 2020.)

Plan GPlan N
Part A deductible ($1,736)CoveredCovered
Part B 20% coinsuranceCovered in fullCovered, minus small copays
Part B deductible ($283/yr)You pay itYou pay it
Office / ER copaysNoneUp to $20 / $50
Part B excess chargesCoveredNot covered
Foreign travel emergency
Typical Utah premiumHigher≈20–30% lower

Plan G in one sentence: pay the $283 Part B deductible once a year, and that’s essentially your entire medical out-of-pocket. Maximum predictability — the most popular Medigap plan in the country.

Plan N in one sentence: a lower premium in exchange for small copays and no excess-charge coverage. If you see the doctor a handful of times a year, the savings often win.

The Utah wrinkle: a small number of providers can bill up to 15% above Medicare’s approved amount (“excess charges”). Eight states ban this — Utah is not one of them. In practice they’re uncommon here, but Plan G covers them and Plan N doesn’t.

High-Deductible Plan G: same coverage as G, but you self-fund Medicare’s cost-sharing up to $2,950 (2026), then the plan pays in full. Premiums often run a third of standard G — a fit for healthy, budget-minded enrollees who want catastrophic protection.

REAL NUMBERS

What Do Medigap Plans Cost in Utah?

Low $100s / mo

Typical Plan G starting premium for a new 65-year-old — varies by carrier, gender, tobacco & ZIP.

20–30% less

What Plan N usually runs vs the same carrier's Plan G.

$202.90 / mo

The 2026 Part B premium — everyone pays this to Medicare on top of any Medigap premium.

Across all plan letters, Utah Medigap premiums span roughly $66–$234/month for typical new enrollees. Budget alongside it: a standalone Part D drug plan (Utah has 10 in 2026, starting at $0).

The number that matters more than the first-year premium: how the plan is priced. Two identical Plan G policies can age very differently — which brings us to the thing almost nobody explains.

WHAT ALMOST NOBODY EXPLAINS

Attained-Age vs. Issue-Age vs. Community-Rated

Attained-age

Priced on your current age — cheapest at 65, climbs every year as you age. Most plans sold in Utah.

Issue-age

Locked to your age when you bought it. Costs more up front, ages more gracefully.

Community-rated

Everyone pays the same regardless of age. Highest start, flattest curve.

Why this matters so much: switching Medigap plans later usually requires medical underwriting. The plan you pick at 65 may be the plan you hold at 85 — and a cheap attained-age policy from a carrier with steep increase history can become the expensive one right when your options are most limited. A good broker compares carriers’ rate-increase histories, not just today’s premium. That’s the part you can’t see on a comparison website.

THE MOST IMPORTANT TIMING FACT IN THIS GUIDE

The 6-Month Window When You Can't Be Turned Down

When you’re 65 or older and your Part B takes effect, you get a one-time, 6-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period. During this window, companies must sell you any plan they offer at standard rates — no health questions, no medical underwriting, no denial for pre-existing conditions. Cancer history, diabetes, heart condition — none of it can be used against you.

After the window closes, the rules flip: in most situations a carrier can ask full health questions, charge you more, or decline you entirely. A few protections survive — federal guaranteed issue rights for specific events, and Utah’s new birthday rule below — but the 6-month window is the only time everything is on the table regardless of health. If Medigap is on your radar, the time to act is then.

THE TRAP NOBODY WARNS YOU ABOUT

The Switching Trap: Easy In, Hard Back

Medigap → Advantage

Easy. Any Annual Enrollment Period (Oct 15–Dec 7), no health questions — Advantage plans can't underwrite you. The door is always open.

Advantage → Medigap

Hard. Usually requires medical underwriting — the carrier can review your health, charge more, or decline you outright. The people most motivated to switch back are exactly the most likely to be refused.

The one big exception — your 12-month trial right: if you joined a Medicare Advantage plan when you were first eligible at 65, you have a federal guaranteed right to switch to Medigap within your first 12 months — no underwriting. After month 12, the door closes to standard underwriting rules.

The takeaway for anyone turning 65 in Utah: your decision isn’t just “which plan is best this year” — it’s “which path do I want to be on,” because one direction of travel is much easier than the other. If you value Medigap’s open-access model, the safest time to choose it is during your 6-month window, when nobody can say no.

NEW FOR UTAH

Utah's New Medigap Birthday Rule

Utah recently joined a small group of states with a Medigap birthday rule (H.B. 258, Medicare Supplement Insurance Amendments). Each year, starting on your birthday, you have 60 days to switch to a Medigap plan of equal or lesser benefits with your current insurance companyguaranteed approval, no health questions, no underwriting.

What it’s good for: stepping down from a pricey old Plan F to your carrier’s Plan G, or from G to N — a pressure-release valve on a climbing premium that didn’t exist for Utahns before.

What it’s not: it doesn’t let you jump to a different carrier, doesn’t let you move up in coverage, and does nothing for someone on Medicare Advantage trying to get into Medigap — the 6-month window and underwriting rules still govern that path.

If your birthday is coming up and your premium has been creeping, this is exactly the kind of thing worth a quick review call — we can check whether a same-carrier downgrade or a fully underwritten move to a cheaper carrier is the better play.

THE OTHER PATH

Medigap vs. Medicare Advantage at a Glance

Medigap + Original MedicareMedicare Advantage
Provider accessAny Medicare provider nationwidePlan network
Referrals / prior authNo / rareSometimes / common
Monthly premium~$100–150+ (Plan G) + Part BOften $0 + Part B
Out-of-pocket exposureAs little as $283/yr (Plan G)Copays up to a $9,250 cap
Drug coverageAdd separate Part DUsually built in
Dental / vision / hearingNot includedOften included

Want the full picture of the other path? Read our Medicare Advantage Plans guide.

THE COMMON SURPRISE

Don't Forget: Medigap Has No Drug Coverage

Medigap pairs with Original Medicare for medical costs — but prescription drugs need a separate Part D plan, and skipping it isn’t free: going without creditable drug coverage triggers a late enrollment penalty that lasts as long as you have Medicare. Utah has 10 standalone Part D plans in 2026, starting at $0, with covered drug costs capped at $2,100 for the year. Matching a Part D plan to your actual prescription list is a 10-minute job we do as part of every Medigap enrollment — they’re two halves of one decision.

PUTTING IT TOGETHER

How to Choose a Medigap Plan in Utah (Without Overpaying)

COMMON QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

Nothing — two names for the same thing. “Medicare Supplement” is the formal name; “Medigap” is the nickname, because the plans fill the gaps in Original Medicare.

For most newly eligible people, the realistic choice is Plan G (maximum predictability) or Plan N (lower premium, small copays). Benefits are standardized by letter, so the real question is which carrier offers your letter at a fair, stable price in Utah.

Yes — any doctor or hospital in the country that accepts Medicare accepts every Medigap plan. There are no networks.

During your one-time 6-month open enrollment window: no — approval is guaranteed regardless of health. Outside it, carriers can generally underwrite and decline, unless you qualify for a guaranteed issue right or use Utah’s birthday rule for a same-carrier change.

A new Utah law giving you 60 days from your birthday each year to switch to a plan of equal or lesser benefits with your current insurer — guaranteed approval, no health questions. It’s for adjusting within Medigap, not for moving from Medicare Advantage into Medigap.

Only if you were eligible for Medicare before January 1, 2020. If your Plan F premium keeps climbing, the birthday rule may let you step down to Plan G with your current carrier — often meaningful savings.

You’re paying for what it removes: networks, referrals, prior authorizations, and unpredictable bills. Advantage shifts costs to when you use care; Medigap front-loads them into a premium and makes the rest of the year predictable. Neither is universally cheaper.

No. Drugs require a separate Part D plan (skipping it triggers a lifetime late penalty). Dental and vision can be added as standalone policies.

No. Premiums are identical whether you enroll through a broker or directly with the carrier. A broker just means the multi-carrier comparison and rate-history homework gets done for you, free.

Talk to a Utah Independent Medicare Broker — Free

At Boo Insurance Services, we’re an independent Medicare brokerage based in Utah. We compare Medigap carriers side by side — premiums, pricing methods, and rate-increase histories — and we’ll tell you honestly if Medigap isn’t the right fit for your situation.

Our help is completely free, with no obligation and no pressure — just straight answers.

Boo Insurance Services is a licensed independent insurance agency. We are not affiliated with or endorsed by the federal Medicare program or any government agency. We do not offer every plan available in your area; any information we provide is limited to the plans we offer. Please contact Medicare.gov, 1-800-MEDICARE, or your local SHIP to get information on all your options.

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