Medicare Part D Notice of Creditable Coverage
September 29, 2020
We are well into the month of September, which means that employers are preparing to send employees the Medicare Part D Notice of Creditable Coverage.
If you have any type of group health plan, whether it be from an employer, a union, or any other group entity, the notice is sent to advise plan participants as to whether their prescription drug coverage is “creditable.”
What is Medicare D Creditable Coverage?
The Medicare Modernization Act made it a requirement that entities that offered plans which included prescription drug coverage had to disclose to all Medicare-eligible individuals whether that prescription drug coverage was “creditable.”
Defining Creditable
For the purposes of this requirement, “creditable” means that the coverage is expected to pay as much as the standard Medicare prescription drug coverage. Among the 2020 parameters for what is considered “standard” under Medicare D are:
Determination of Creditable CoverageThe prescription drug plan is deemed to be creditable if it:
The plan must also satisfy one of the following criteria:
NotificationThe creditable or non-creditable coverage notice must be provided to Medicare Part D eligible individuals who are covered or who apply for the plan’s prescription drug coverage. This includes active, retired, disabled, and COBRA beneficiaries and dependents. The notice must be furnished no later than October 14. The Part D Annual Election Period runs from October 15 through December 7 of 2020.
It is often difficult to determine which participants are Medicare D eligible, so the prudent solution is to send the notification to ALL plan participants prior to October 14. Click here for a guide that provides a calculator methodology for determining creditable coverage.
There is also a necessary notification requirement for entities to complete the Online Disclosure to CMS Form to report the creditable coverage status of their prescription drug plan. The disclosure should be completed annually no later than 60 days from the beginning of a plan year, within 30 days after the termination of a prescription drug plan, or within 30 days after any change in creditable coverage status.
Penalties
While there are no formal penalties attached to non-conformance of the requirement, the Medicare-eligible individual may incur a late enrollment penalty if notification as to non-creditable coverage exists and that individual then attempts to enroll in a Medicare Part D plan.