Your Consultation Has Been Scheduled
Thank you for booking your free Medicare consultation. We look forward to speaking with you and helping you better understand your Medicare options.
What Happens Next?
- You’ll receive a confirmation email shortly with your appointment details and Zoom link.
- Please check your spam or promotions folder if you don’t see it within a few minutes.
- During your consultation, we’ll answer your questions and help you better understand your Medicare options based on your situation.
Helpful Things to Have Nearby
While not required, it may help to have:
- Your Medicare card (if available)
- A list of current prescriptions
- Questions about coverage, costs, or enrollment timelines
- Information about your current healthcare providers
No Pressure. Just Guidance.
Our consultations are educational, personalized, and designed to help you make informed Medicare decisions with confidence.
Continue Exploring Medicare Resources
While you wait for your consultation, explore some of our most helpful Medicare guides and educational resources below.
Still Working at 65? Here’s When to Enroll in Medicare — and When You Can Wait
Medicare is not free — and the total cost isn’t just one number. It’s a structure made up of Part A, Part B, Part D, and the coverage path you choose. This post breaks down what Medicare actually costs in 2026, in plain English, so you can stop guessing and start planning.
How Much Does Medicare Actually Cost in 2026?
Medicare is not free — and the total cost isn’t just one number. It’s a structure made up of Part A, Part B, Part D, and the coverage path you choose. This post breaks down what Medicare actually costs in 2026, in plain English, so you can stop guessing and start planning.
Medicare Advantage vs. Medigap in 2026: Key Differences
Choosing between Medicare Advantage and Medigap? Learn the key differences in cost, doctor access, flexibility, and which plan fits your lifestyle in 2026.
The Hidden Cost of Ignoring Your Medicare Plan
Good Medicare decisions don’t fail — they drift. Learn why the real cost of ignoring your Medicare plan isn’t higher bills, but narrowing options, and what a simple annual check-in can do to protect your flexibility before it’s gone.
Medicare After Age 70: What Changes and Why It Matters More Than You Think
After age 70, Medicare decisions feel heavier — but the system keeps moving. Learn what changes about timing, flexibility, and insurance company experience, and why a simple annual check-in matters more now than it did at 65.
$0 Premium Medicare Advantage Plans Aren’t a Strategy (Here’s What Matters More)
A $0 premium sounds like a win. And sometimes a free plan can be. But if you’re choosing a Medicare plan based on “zero premium” alone, you’re basically budgeting retirement with one eye closed. What you actually care about is this: Am I going to pay more later? Will...
Medicare Advantage vs Medigap: Why the “Right” Choice Can Still Cause Problems Later
Most people don’t make a bad Medicare decision.They make a reasonable one—based on the information they have—at the exact moment they’re forced to choose. And here’s the part that trips people up: the decision usually doesn’t blow up right away. It works… until...
If Your Medicare Advantage Plan Is Ending in Your Area, Do This Soon
If your Medicare Advantage plan is ending where you live, don’t ignore the letter. This guide explains service area reductions (SAR), what happens on January 1 if you do nothing, the biggest mistakes to avoid, and a simple checklist to keep your coverage and prescriptions on track.
Your Medicare Advantage Plan Might Look the Same — But These 2026 Changes Hit January 1
If you’re on a Medicare Advantage plan, you’re probably asking: “Did anything actually change?” Your card looks the same. The plan name didn’t change. Maybe your premium didn’t change. So it’s tempting to assume 2026 is just a repeat of last year. Here’s the problem:...
Why Your Medicare Drug Costs Are Going UP (Even With the New $2,100 Cap)
Many people will see higher Medicare drug costs in 2026, even with the new $2,100 cap. This guide breaks down why prices are rising, what the cap actually does, and how to check your medications so January doesn’t surprise you.