If you relied on your insurance plan to pay for your daily vitamins, healthy groceries, or utility bills last year, you may have received a “Benefit Termination” notice this month. As of January 2026, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has officially ended the Value-Based Insurance Design (VBID) model, a pilot program that previously allowed health plans to offer “non-medical” perks to broad groups of seniors. This means that for millions of Americans—especially those in Dual Special Needs Plans (D-SNP)—the “easy” access to free health items is being replaced by much stricter eligibility rules. You must now often prove you have a specific, medically complex chronic condition just to keep the same benefits you enjoyed in 2025.
The Sunset of the VBID Program
The primary driver of health items no longer covered in 2026 is the conclusion of the VBID model, which was a multi-year experiment to see if “non-medical” benefits like food and housing support improved health outcomes. While the program was popular, its expiration has forced insurers to migrate these benefits to the Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill (SSBCI) program.
Unlike the old model, the SSBCI program is not universal; it requires a documented diagnosis of a “complex chronic condition” such as diabetes, chronic heart failure, or a disabling mental health disorder. This change has caused an estimated 7% drop in plans offering over-the-counter (OTC) allowances this year, as carriers tighten their belts following the $2,100 Part D cap implementation.
1. “Universal” Grocery and Food Credits
The most visible cut in 2026 is the removal of “no-strings-attached” grocery and healthy food cards for many standard Medicare Advantage members. While these were used as a major marketing hook in previous years, they are now strictly limited to those who can verify a qualifying chronic condition with their insurer. If your plan cannot confirm your diagnosis through its existing records, your food benefits will be deactivated until your doctor submits a “Provider Attestation Form.” This shift has resulted in a “benefit cliff” for thousands of seniors who relied on these credits to offset the 6% grocery inflation expected for 2026.
2. Bathroom Safety and Home Modifications
In 2025, many “Age-in-Place” programs provided credits for bathroom safety equipment like grab bars and raised toilet seats. However, for 2026, many plans have reclassified these items as “environmental modifications” rather than “primarily health-related” devices. This has led to a significant decline in Special Needs Plans (SNPs) offering bathroom safety benefits, falling from 54% in 2025 to just 47% in 2026. Unless you are recovering from a documented surgery or injury, your insurance will likely no longer cover the cost of these essential fall-prevention tools.
3. General “Lifestyle” Vitamins and Supplements
Multivitamins, fish oil, and “alternative medicines” are now among the top health items no longer covered by private insurers. While many plans used to allow you to buy these using an OTC card, the new 2026 “Efficiency Adjustments” have led carriers to remove them from their approved lists. They are now prioritizing “essential” medical supplies like first aid and pain relievers over general wellness supplements. If you find your favorite Vitamin D or Omega-3 brand is suddenly “non-formulary,” it’s a direct result of insurers focusing their dollars on chronic disease management rather than general prevention.
4. Minor Orthotics and Splints
Basic “over-the-counter” grade wrist splints, knee sleeves, and walking boots for minor sprains are the latest victims of the 2026 coverage reset. Insurers are increasingly directing patients to purchase these items at retail pharmacies using their own1 funds rather than through a medical claim. As noted in the Medicare and You Handbook 2026, only “complex” or custom-fitted orthotics that are “essential for the function of a malformed body member” are guaranteed coverage under many new plan structures. This means a $40 ankle brace for a minor twist is now a 100% out-of-pocket expense for many marketplace and Medicare enrollees.
5. Non-Medical Transportation and Home Services
Perhaps the most painful cut is the reduction in “Social Needs” benefits like transportation to the grocery store or in-home cleaning. Many plans that previously offered these “Social Support” perks have eliminated them for 2026 as federal subsidies for these pilot programs have expired. The share of individual Medicare Advantage plans offering medical transportation has dropped to just 24% in 2026, leaving many seniors without a reliable way to get to the pharmacy or the clinic. These non-medical supports were the first to go as carriers adjusted their bids to account for the new mandatory drug spending caps.
Navigating the 2026 Benefit Shrinkage
The disappearance of health items no longer covered marks a fundamental shift in insurance philosophy from “wellness for all” to “support for the sickest.” While the new $2,100 Part D cap is a massive win for those with high prescription costs, the “secondary” benefits that helped with daily living have been the primary casualty of the 2026 budget reset. To protect your household budget, you must work with your doctor to ensure every chronic condition you manage is officially “verified” in your insurer’s system. This simple administrative step is now the only key to unlocking the remaining food and utility credits that remain available in the 2026 market.
Have you tried to use your grocery or OTC card this month only to have it rejected at the checkout? Leave a comment below and tell us which plan you’re on and what item was denied—we’re helping our community find the best 2026 workarounds.
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