
Medicare Advantage Plans may try to tempt you with a variety of supplemental benefits—or things that Original Medicare can’t cover. These supplemental benefits can be extremely helpful, or they can end up being disappointing and misleading. In this Medicare Minute we’ll share what to look for when considering supplemental benefits and when to be cautious.
Here is a handy print out to keep with you or continue reading below.
What Are Supplemental Benefits?
A supplemental benefit is an item or service covered by a Medicare Advantage plan that is not covered by Original Medicare. Common supplemental benefits include:
- dental care
- vision care
- hearing aids
- gym membership
Supplemental benefits can be:
- Optional: They are offered to everyone enrolled in the plan. You can choose to purchase coverage if you want. For example, an optional dental benefit for which you can pay an extra premium.
- Mandatory: They are covered for everyone enrolled in the plan. For example, a gym membership benefit that’s included in the plan. You don’t pay an extra premium, and you can’t decline or opt out of the benefit. Mandatory doesn’t mean you need to use it, though.
Supplemental benefits must be primarily health related. There are some exceptions, though, for people with chronic conditions. See the following section for more.
Supplemental Benefits for Chronic Conditions
Plans can cover supplemental benefits that are not primarily health-related for enrollees who have chronic illnesses. These benefits can address social determinants of health for people with chronic disease. A social determinant of health is a part of someone’s life that can affect their health in some way. Examples of the kind of benefit that plans can cover are:
- Meal delivery
- Transportation for non-medical needs
- Home air cleaners
- Pest control
- Heart-healthy food or produce
To be eligible, you must be chronically ill. If you meet the criteria, a Medicare Advantage plan may offer you one of these benefits.
Note that not every member of a plan will have access to the same set of benefits. For example, a plan might cover services like home air cleaning and carpet shampooing for its members who have serious asthma. A member of that plan who doesn’t have asthma, or whose asthma is not as severe, will not have access to this coverage.
Questions to Ask a Medicare Advantage Plan
You might be interested in a plan that offers these supplemental benefits. If so, learn as much as possible before enrolling in the plan. It’s important to know exactly how a plan’s supplemental benefits work before signing up. Make sure to document calls and get information in writing. Ask questions like:
- Is this an optional benefit that I need to sign up for? Do I need to pay extra for it?
- Is the benefit only for people with chronic conditions? If so, do I meet the criteria?
- Are there limits to how much I can use this benefit?
- Are there restrictions on where and how I can access these services? For example, do I need to see in-network providers or get a referral first?
- Is this the most cost-effective way for me to access these services?
- Do the other parts of this plan’s coverage (not just the supplemental benefits) work for me? Are my providers in the plan’s network? Does the plan cover my drugs?
Look Out for Marketing Misrepresentation
Medicare has rules about how Medicare Advantage and Part D plans can contact you and market their services. It is a marketing violation to mislead Medicare beneficiaries when selling private plans. Marketing misrepresentation is a type of misleading marketing.
When it comes to supplemental benefits, remember that these are items and services that Original Medicare cannot cover. Each Medicare Advantage plan determines exactly what the benefit looks like—from how expansive or restrictive the coverage is, to the rules beneficiaries must follow to get coverage. When selling plans, agents or brokers should not mislead you into thinking that the plan’s supplemental benefits are more generous or less restrictive than they are.
The following are examples of marketing misrepresentation of Medicare Advantage supplemental benefits:
- An advertisement for the plan says that you would have access to the plan’s transportation benefit to help you get to appointments, when this benefit is not available to everyone—only to enrollees with chronic conditions.
- An agent tells you that your eye doctor is in network for the plan’s vision benefit, when you later learn that the doctor is not and never was in the plan’s network.
- An agent claims that the plan’s dental benefit covers fillings and dentures, when it really only covers regular cleanings and x-rays.
- An agent claims that Medicare covers hearing aids, when it doesn’t and hearing aids can be bought over the counter.
If you feel you have experienced misleading marketing, save all the information such as an agent’s business card, messages, marketing handouts, or other contact information. You should report this to your local Senior Medicare Patrol (SMP) or State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP). Your SHIP can also help you switch plans if you enrolled based on misleading information. Contact information for your local SMP and SHIP.
The SHINE Medicare counseling team at the Area Agency on Aging for Southwest Florida serves at the local SMP and SHIP in southwest Florida.
Call us at 866-413-5337 or shineinfo@aaaswfl.org.
The Medicare Rights Center is the author of portions of the content in these materials but is not responsible for any content not authored by the Medicare Rights Center. This document is supported by the Administration for Community Living (ACL), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award totaling $2,534,081 with 100 percent funding by ACL/HHS. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by ACL/HHS, or the U.S. Government.
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Posted: October 1, 2025 by
Medicare Minute: Medicare Advantage Supplemental Benefits
Medicare Advantage Plans may try to tempt you with a variety of supplemental benefits—or things that Original Medicare can’t cover. These supplemental benefits can be extremely helpful, or they can end up being disappointing and misleading. In this Medicare Minute we’ll share what to look for when considering supplemental benefits and when to be cautious.
Here is a handy print out to keep with you or continue reading below.
What Are Supplemental Benefits?
A supplemental benefit is an item or service covered by a Medicare Advantage plan that is not covered by Original Medicare. Common supplemental benefits include:
Supplemental benefits can be:
Supplemental benefits must be primarily health related. There are some exceptions, though, for people with chronic conditions. See the following section for more.
Supplemental Benefits for Chronic Conditions
Plans can cover supplemental benefits that are not primarily health-related for enrollees who have chronic illnesses. These benefits can address social determinants of health for people with chronic disease. A social determinant of health is a part of someone’s life that can affect their health in some way. Examples of the kind of benefit that plans can cover are:
To be eligible, you must be chronically ill. If you meet the criteria, a Medicare Advantage plan may offer you one of these benefits.
Note that not every member of a plan will have access to the same set of benefits. For example, a plan might cover services like home air cleaning and carpet shampooing for its members who have serious asthma. A member of that plan who doesn’t have asthma, or whose asthma is not as severe, will not have access to this coverage.
Questions to Ask a Medicare Advantage Plan
You might be interested in a plan that offers these supplemental benefits. If so, learn as much as possible before enrolling in the plan. It’s important to know exactly how a plan’s supplemental benefits work before signing up. Make sure to document calls and get information in writing. Ask questions like:
Look Out for Marketing Misrepresentation
Medicare has rules about how Medicare Advantage and Part D plans can contact you and market their services. It is a marketing violation to mislead Medicare beneficiaries when selling private plans. Marketing misrepresentation is a type of misleading marketing.
When it comes to supplemental benefits, remember that these are items and services that Original Medicare cannot cover. Each Medicare Advantage plan determines exactly what the benefit looks like—from how expansive or restrictive the coverage is, to the rules beneficiaries must follow to get coverage. When selling plans, agents or brokers should not mislead you into thinking that the plan’s supplemental benefits are more generous or less restrictive than they are.
The following are examples of marketing misrepresentation of Medicare Advantage supplemental benefits:
If you feel you have experienced misleading marketing, save all the information such as an agent’s business card, messages, marketing handouts, or other contact information. You should report this to your local Senior Medicare Patrol (SMP) or State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP). Your SHIP can also help you switch plans if you enrolled based on misleading information. Contact information for your local SMP and SHIP.
The SHINE Medicare counseling team at the Area Agency on Aging for Southwest Florida serves at the local SMP and SHIP in southwest Florida.
Call us at 866-413-5337 or shineinfo@aaaswfl.org.
The Medicare Rights Center is the author of portions of the content in these materials but is not responsible for any content not authored by the Medicare Rights Center. This document is supported by the Administration for Community Living (ACL), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award totaling $2,534,081 with 100 percent funding by ACL/HHS. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by ACL/HHS, or the U.S. Government.
Category: Elder Abuse, Medicare, SHINE
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