You likely watched the news about the 2.8% Social Security COLA and calculated exactly how much extra money you would have this year. Then the first deposit of 2026 hit your bank account, and the math didn’t add up.
This discrepancy is the first warning sign that your Medicare costs have shifted. While the Cost-of-Living Adjustment gets the headlines, the “Medicare adjustments” often happen quietly in the fine print. In 2026, inflation has driven premiums and deductibles higher, effectively clawing back a significant portion of your raise before you ever see it. Here are the five red flags that indicate your healthcare costs just went up.
1. Your Social Security Deposit Is Lower Than Expected
If your direct deposit is smaller than your COLA letter predicted, the culprit is almost certainly the Part B premium. For 2026, the standard monthly premium has jumped to roughly $202.90, an increase of nearly $18 from last year.
Because this premium is automatically deducted from your Social Security check, it reduces your net benefit. For many seniors, this premium hike absorbed nearly 30% of their entire COLA increase. If you are a high earner (earning over $109,000 individually), you might also be seeing a new IRMAA surcharge, which can push your monthly premium over $500.
2. You Receive a $283 Bill for a Standard Office Visit
You might be used to walking out of your doctor’s office without paying a dime. That “free” streak ends in January. The Medicare Part B deductible has reset and increased to $283 for 2026.
This means you are responsible for the first $283 of outpatient care entirely out-of-pocket. Until you satisfy this amount, Medicare pays nothing. If your first appointment of the year is for a checkup that includes diagnostic tests, expect a bill for the full allowable amount to arrive in your mailbox within weeks.
3. The Pharmacy Registers a “Deductible Phase” Charge
The most painful reset for many seniors occurs at the pharmacy counter. The maximum allowable deductible for Part D drug plans has risen to $615 in 2026.
If your plan utilizes this maximum—as many “budget” plans do—you must pay the full retail price of your prescriptions until you spend $615. Last month, a $400 heart medication might have cost you a $40 copay. This month, you will be asked to pay the full $400. This is not a billing error; it is the standard reset of your coverage phases.
4. You Are Billed Hourly for a Hospital Bed
If you end up in the ER this winter, pay close attention to the word “Observation.” Hospitals are increasingly using Observation Status to avoid readmission penalties. In this status, you are technically an outpatient, even if you stay overnight in a hospital bed.
This distinction is critical in 2026 because the Part A inpatient deductible has spiked to $1,736. While “Observation” avoids this massive $1,736 fee, it exposes you to uncapped Part B coinsurance. You pay 20% of every single test, scan, and pill administered to you. For a two-day stay, this 20% coinsurance often exceeds the cost of the inpatient deductible you thought you were avoiding.
5. Your Copays Have Returned
For those on Medicare Advantage, December is often a cheap month because you may have hit your “Maximum Out-of-Pocket” (MOOP) limit. On January 1, that limit reset—potentially to as high as $9,250 for in-network care.
This means every specialist visit, physical therapy session, and lab test now requires a copay again. If you were enjoying $0 visits for your chronic condition management at the end of 2025, be prepared to resume paying $40 or $50 per visit until you chip away at that new $9,000 ceiling.
Review Your “Explanation of Benefits” Immediately
Do not assume a higher bill is a mistake. Log in to MyMedicare.gov or your plan’s portal and check your 2026 deductible status. If you have not met that $283 Part B limit or $615 Part D limit, you must budget for full-price healthcare until spring.
Did your Social Security check shrink instead of grow this month? Leave a comment below—tell us how much the Part B premium took from your COLA!
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