AARP Hearing Center
Key takeaways
- Not everything’s covered, but here’s how to plan.
- You’re out of luck on root canals, most eye care, hearing aids.
- Most chiropractor, cosmetic surgeon services are off-limits.
- No massage therapy for pain, but some acupuncture allowed.
- Pay more for podiatry, foreign trips, long-term care, concierge care.
Medicare covers most health care needs for older Americans, from hospital care and doctor visits to lab tests and surgery.
Though great strides were made in recent years on paying for prescriptions, whether you have a Part D plan with original Medicare or drug coverage tucked into a Medicare Advantage plan, you should be prepared to pay $2,100 in 2026 for your covered medications before the limit kicks in. The federal government will help you finance that amount over time if you sign up for the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan.
You’ll still have to foot the bill for out-of-pocket costs such as deductibles and copayments if you’re hospitalized, see a doctor or get medical tests.
But some necessities — and desires — aren’t part of the program. Here’s how you might pay for them.
1. Dental work, such as a root canal, is rarely covered
Original Medicare covers some dental-related expenses in very specific situations.
- In 2023, dental exams and necessary treatments before organ transplant surgery were added.
- In 2024, Medicare started covering a dental exam as part of a comprehensive workup at the same time as Medicare-covered treatments for head and neck cancer.
- In 2025, Medicare began covering dental exams and treatment for patients entering or on kidney dialysis.
But it doesn’t cover items or services for the care, treatment, filling, removal or replacement of teeth or structures directly supporting the teeth. That includes cleanings, tooth extractions, checkups or big-ticket items, including dentures and root canals. No further expansion of dental coverage is expected in 2026.
The fix. Some Medicare Advantage plans offer limited dental coverage. They focus on preventive services with some covering a portion of the cost of more extensive care up to an annual limit — though some plans will allow you to upgrade your coverage for an additional charge.
If you opt for original Medicare, consider buying an individual dental insurance plan or a dental discount plan. Some Medigap insurers allow you to add coverage for an extra premium or give you membership in a dental discount program.
2. Routine eye exams and glasses? No. Cataracts? Yes
While original Medicare covers ophthalmologic expenses such as cataract surgery, it doesn’t pay for routine eye exams, glasses or contact lenses. Some private Medicare Advantage plans cover routine vision care and glasses.
If you’ve been diagnosed with diabetes, both original Medicare and Medicare Advantage will cover an eye exam each year. In addition to checking your vision, a specialist will look for damage that can lead to permanent vision loss, including diabetic retinopathy, which affects blood vessels inside your eye; cataracts clouding the lens of your eye; and glaucoma, which damages the optic nerve if pressure from fluid inside your eye gets too high.
The fix. For some people, buying a vision insurance policy for a few hundred dollars a year to defray the cost of glasses or contact lenses makes sense. Even though standard Medigap plans, the supplemental insurance available from private insurers to augment original Medicare coverage, don’t cover vision, some companies let you buy extra benefits that cover some in-network vision exams and a pair of glasses or contacts each year, up to an annual limit.
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