Skip to Main Content

WASHINGTON — Medicare officials are offering private insurers big subsidies to keep premiums for prescription-drug plans stable as the elections approach.

The Inflation Reduction Act, passed by Democrats in 2022, made several changes to Medicare’s drug benefit, known as Medicare Part D. All were aimed at lowering drug prices and drug costs for both seniors and the federal government. The most well-known policies cap annual out-of-pocket drug costs for seniors, limit their monthly insulin costs, and direct Medicare to negotiate drug prices.

advertisement

The law also made changes to Medicare Part D that matter to insurers but aren’t well-known to the general public. Among them, insurers now must pay a much greater share of seniors’ catastrophic drug costs, which are out-of-pocket costs that exceed $2,000, starting next year. The federal government used to cover the vast majority of those costs.

STAT+ Exclusive Story

STAT+

This article is exclusive to STAT+ subscribers

Unlock this article — plus daily intelligence on Capitol Hill and the life sciences industry — by subscribing to STAT+.

Already have an account? Log in

Monthly

$39

Totals $468 per year

$39/month Get Started

Totals $468 per year

Starter

$30

for 3 months, then $399/year

$30 for 3 months Get Started

Then $399/year

Annual

$399

Save 15%

$399/year Get Started

Save 15%

11+ Users

Custom

Savings start at 25%!

Request A Quote Request A Quote

Savings start at 25%!

2-10 Users

$300

Annually per user

$300/year Get Started

$300 Annually per user

View All Plans

To read the rest of this story subscribe to STAT+.

Subscribe

To submit a correction request, please visit our Contact Us page.