Seniors hit with 10 percent Medicare Part B cost increase in 2026
by Joseph Choi - 11/17/25 3:53 PM ET
Medicare Part B premiums will rise by about 10 percent in 2026 according to a notice from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
The CMS released a notice laying out the monthly actuarial rates for Medicare Part B beneficiaries beginning in 2026. For seniors and disabled enrollees, the monthly actuarial rates will be $405.40 and $585.60.
“The 2026 premium is 9.7 percent or $17.90 higher than the 2025 standard premium rate of $185.00,” the notice stated, leaving a total of $202.90.
This jump is almost twice the percentage increase seen in 2025, when the standard monthly Part B premium rate went up from $174.70 in 2024 to $185.
The deductible for all Part B enrollees next year will be $283.
Medicare Part B covers certain medical costs including ambulance services, outpatient hospital services, some prescription drugs, medical equipment, oxygen equipment and services for substance use disorders.
The Trump administration claimed the increase would have been higher had the CMS not taken action on skin substitutes earlier this year. Skin substitutes are biologic or synthetic products used for outpatient wound care.
The CMS proposed in July measures to “reduce waste and unnecessary use of skin substitutes.” The agency cited data showing Medicare Part B spending on skin substitutes had gone from $256 million in 2019 to more than $10 billion in 2024.
The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General said in September that skin substitutes appear to be “particularly vulnerable to questionable billing and fraud schemes.”
“The increase in the 2026 Part B standard premium and deductible is mainly due to projected price changes and assumed utilization increases that are consistent with historical experience. If the Trump Administration had not taken action to address unprecedented spending on skin substitutes, the Part B premium increase would have been about $11 more a month,” the CMS said in a statement last week announcing next year’s premiums.
“However, due to changes finalized in the 2026 Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule, spending on skin substitutes is expected to drop by 90% without affecting patient care.”
Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.), ranking member of the House Ways and Means Committee, blasted the increased premium rate.
“The across-the-board cost increases in Medicare announced by the Trump Administration show that nobody will be spared from their endless assault on people’s wallets and the public health system,” Neal said in a statement Monday.
“Not content with exorbitant premium hikes for those who purchase their own coverage, Trump has taken action to raise costs for all Americans with employer coverage and is now hiking costs for people covered by Medicare by more than $200 a year.”
https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5609430-medicare-part-b-premiums-2026/