Medigap (Medicare Supplement) in Texas
Medicare Supplement plans (Medigap) work alongside Original Medicare. Original Medicare pays its share, the Medigap plan pays some or all of what Medicare doesn't.
Medigap plans are standardized by letter (Plan G, Plan N, Plan F for those eligible, etc.). The benefits inside any given letter are the same across every carrier. What varies is the premium, the carrier's rate-history pattern, and the underwriting rules outside guaranteed-issue periods.
For Texans who travel often or split time between regions, Medigap's nationwide acceptance can be a meaningful advantage. Any provider in the country who accepts Medicare is in-network for you.
What's worth knowing about Medigap in TX
No Birthday Rule in Texas. A handful of states (California and Oregon, for example) let residents switch Medigap plans during a window around their birthday without medical underwriting. Texas is not one of them. Outside guaranteed-issue periods, switching Medigap plans in TX usually requires going through underwriting.
Plan letters are standardized. Premiums aren't. Plan G from one carrier covers exactly the same benefits as Plan G from any other carrier. Premiums for the same letter can vary significantly across Texas carriers. Some carriers have a history of larger annual rate increases than others, even if their starting premium is competitive. Rate history matters.
No network. You see any Medicare provider. Medigap doesn't have a network. Any provider in the country who accepts Medicare is in-network for you. That matters in Texas where major hospital networks (Memorial Hermann, Texas Health, Methodist, Baylor Scott & White, UT Health, MD Anderson) compete and not all are in-network on the same Medicare Advantage plan.
Drug coverage is separate (Part D). Medigap plans don't include prescription drug coverage. You need a standalone Medicare Part D plan alongside your Medigap. That's two premiums to consider when comparing total monthly cost against a Medicare Advantage plan that bundles drug coverage in.
Common questions about Medigap in Texas
Which Medigap plan letter is most popular in Texas?
Plan G has been the most commonly selected Medigap plan for newly-eligible Medicare beneficiaries since 2020 (when Plan F closed to people newly eligible for Medicare). Plan N is also a strong option for people who want a lower premium and don't mind small office-visit copays. Which letter fits you depends on your situation, not on what's most popular.
Can I be denied Medigap coverage in Texas?
Inside your Medigap Open Enrollment Period (the 6 months starting when you're 65 and enrolled in Part B), you have guaranteed-issue rights for the standardized plans. You can't be denied for health reasons during that window.
Outside that window, and outside other guaranteed-issue situations (losing employer coverage, plan terminations, etc.), Texas carriers generally use medical underwriting. You can be asked health questions, and you can be approved, declined, or approved with conditions.
If you're considering Medigap, getting it set up correctly during your initial window matters.
Does Medigap help me access MD Anderson or other major Texas cancer centers?
Original Medicare plus a Medigap plan accepts any provider in the country who accepts Medicare. MD Anderson Cancer Center accepts Medicare. Most major Texas academic centers accept Medicare. With Medigap, the network question that complicates Medicare Advantage plan selection mostly goes away. We can confirm acceptance for the specific specialists you'd want to see.
Do I still need Part D if I have Medigap in Texas?
Yes, in almost every case. Medigap doesn't cover prescription drugs. Without a Part D plan, you'd be paying full retail for every medication, and you'd be accumulating a Late Enrollment Penalty if you stay without creditable drug coverage for more than 63 days after your IEP. We help pair the right Part D plan with your Medigap.
How much does Medigap cost in Texas?
Premiums vary significantly by carrier, plan letter, your age, and your ZIP code. We can pull current rates for the plans you're considering and walk through both the starting premium and the carrier's rate history.
Are you connected to Medicare or to a specific Medigap carrier?
No. The Right Choice Agency is an independent licensed insurance agency. We are not connected with or endorsed by the United States government, the federal Medicare program, or any single carrier. We help you compare options from the carriers we represent. For information on all your options, contact Medicare.gov or call 1-800-MEDICARE.
Medigap is a multi-decade commitment. Worth getting right
We walk through which plan letter fits your situation, compare premiums across the carriers we represent in Texas, and set you up with a Part D plan that pairs cleanly. If you're already in a Medigap plan that's working, we tell you to stay. That's the whole pitch.
For the full Texas overview, see Medicare in Texas. For more on how Medigap works generally, see Medicare Supplement (Medigap).
Required disclosures. We are not connected with or endorsed by the United States government or the federal Medicare program. We do not offer every plan available in your area. Any information we provide is limited to those plans we do offer in your area. Please contact Medicare.gov or 1-800-MEDICARE to get information on all of your options. Plan availability, premiums, and benefits vary by county, ZIP code, and plan year. This is not a complete description of benefits.

