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Next Gen Econ > Debt > 5 Co-Pay Categories That Shift Once Annual Limits Reset
Debt

5 Co-Pay Categories That Shift Once Annual Limits Reset

NGEC By NGEC Last updated: January 2, 2026 5 Min Read
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The arrival of January 1, 2026, marks the annual “Great Reset” for healthcare spending. For millions of Americans, this is the month where the safety net of the previous year vanishes, and the climb toward the 2026 Out-of-Pocket (OOP) Maximum begins anew. With the ACA individual OOP limit rising to $10,600 and the Medicare Part D cap adjusting to $2,100, understanding which categories shift from “zero cost” back to “full co-pay” is critical for your Q1 budget. When your limits reset, these five categories see the most dramatic shifts in how much you pay at the point of service.

1. Specialty Tier Medications

The most visible shift happens at the pharmacy counter. Once you hit your annual limit, most plans cover 100% of drug costs. However, in January, these reset to their highest tiers. In 2026, Medicare Part D enrollees face a new $2,100 out-of-pocket cap. Until you reach that $2,100, you are responsible for the $615 deductible and subsequent co-pays. For specialty drugs (Tier 4 and 5), this often means a shift from $0 in December to a 25–33% coinsurance payment in January.

2. “Observation” and Outpatient Facility Fees

Under new 2026 site-neutral payment rules, many procedures are being shifted to outpatient settings. In December, if you had met your OOP max, a diagnostic scan or minor outpatient surgery might have cost you nothing. After the January reset, these services trigger a “facility fee” co-pay in addition to the professional fee. Because many 2026 plans have increased these flat-rate fees to offset lower premiums, a “reset” scan can suddenly cost $250 to $500 out-of-pocket.

3. High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) Primary Care

If you are among the millions in an HSA-eligible HDHP, your co-pay structure is “all-or-nothing.” In 2026, the IRS minimum deductible for individuals is $1,700. Until that $1,700 is met, your “co-pay” for a non-preventive doctor visit isn’t a flat $30—it is the full negotiated rate (often $150+). This category shifts from 100% coverage back to 100% personal responsibility the moment the calendar turns.

4. Advanced Imaging (MRI, CT, PET)

Advanced imaging is a “high-utilization” category that insurers frequently target for cost-sharing. In the 2026 plan year, many insurers have moved imaging from a flat co-pay to a 20% coinsurance model until the OOP maximum is reached. If you met your limit in late 2025, an MRI was free; in January 2026, that same MRI could cost you $300 to $600 as you begin chipping away at your new $10,600 limit.

5. Durable Medical Equipment (DME) Rentals

For those using rented equipment like oxygen concentrators or hospital beds, the “reset” can be a monthly shock. If you met your OOP max in 2025, your monthly rental co-pays were waived. In January, the 20% coinsurance resumes. With Medicare DME fees rising by up to 2.8% in 2026, your monthly “rent” for medical gear will likely be higher than what you paid during the early months of 2025.

Managing the “January Jump”

To survive the reset, take advantage of the 2026 Medicare Prescription Payment Plan (MPPP), which allows you to spread your drug costs into capped monthly installments rather than paying the full deductible in January. For non-drug costs, check if your provider offers a “Prompt Pay” discount; many hospital systems will reduce your co-pay by 10-15% if you pay your portion of the reset deductible on the day of service.

Did you get a surprise bill this week for a service that was free last month? Leave a comment below and share which category hit your budget the hardest.

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