Medicare Part D costs vary significantly based on the specific plan chosen, income level, and prescription drug usage, but the 2026 base beneficiary premium is set at $38.99 per month. Private insurers set actual premiums around this benchmark, often ranging from $0 to over $200 monthly, plus deductibles up to $615 and copays or coinsurance in structured phases.

Key 2026 Costs

Private plans determine premiums, but national benchmarks provide a guide. The deductible cap rises to $615 from $590 in 2025.

Cost Component| 2025 Amount| 2026 Amount| % Change
---|---|---|---
Part D Base Premium| $36.78| $38.99| 6% 1
Part D Deductible (max)| $590| $615| 4.2% 1
Catastrophic Threshold| $2,000| $2,100| 5% 1

Average premiums may dip slightly to around $34.50, influenced by the Inflation Reduction Act's reforms.

Cost Phases Explained

Part D follows a phased structure post-deductible, with out-of-pocket caps now at $2,000 annually starting 2025 onward.

  • Deductible Phase : Pay full drug costs up to $615.
  • Initial Coverage : Copays (e.g., $0-$10 generics) until $5,030 total spend (2026 est.).
  • Coverage Gap : Discounts increase (generic 25% to 60% off).
  • Catastrophic : Minimal copays after $2,100 out-of-pocket.

Low-income subsidy (LIS) users pay as little as $0-$12.65 per script.

Income Adjustments

Higher earners face IRMAA surcharges added to premiums.

Filing Status (Individual)| Monthly Surcharge (Est.)
---|---

$109K-$137K| $81.20 3
$137K-$171K| $202.90 3
$205K-$500K| $446.30 3

Plan Selection Tips

Compare via Medicare.gov during Open Enrollment (Oct 15-Dec 7). Costs rose modestly in 2026 amid stable Advantage/Part D markets. Factors like formulary coverage and pharmacy networks impact true expenses—review annually as drug needs evolve.

TL;DR : Expect $35-$40 average monthly premiums, up to $615 deductible, and phased copays; shop plans for best fit.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.