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A Houston professional in their late 60s still working, weighing whether to delay Medicare Part B while covered by an employer health plan

Working Past 65 in Houston: When You Can Delay Medicare Part B in 2026

You’re 65 — or close — and you’re still working. Maybe at the Texas Medical Center, an energy company downtown, or your own small business out in Katy. Everyone says “sign up for Medicare,” but you already have a health plan through work, you like your doctors, and the last thing you want is to start paying a new monthly premium for coverage you may not even need yet. The mail from Social Security and the well-meaning advice from co-workers point in different directions, and nobody seems to give you a straight answer.

Here is the straight answer, the one we give Houston workers every week: in many cases you can delay Medicare Part B past 65 with no penalty — but only if your situation fits a specific set of rules, and the single most important number is how many employees your (or your spouse’s) employer has. Get that wrong and you can owe a lifelong penalty, lose a tax break on your Health Savings Account, or be left with claims nobody pays. This guide from Wise Insurance Agency walks through exactly when delaying is safe and when it is a costly mistake. If you would rather talk it through with a Texas-licensed agent, call 832-743-1318 or book an appointment — we will look at your specific employer plan with you.

Key Takeaways
  • The 20-employee line decides everything. If your or your spouse’s employer has 20 or more employees and the coverage is based on current active work, that plan is primary and you can delay Part B with no late penalty.
  • Fewer than 20 employees changes the answer. At a small employer, Medicare is generally the primary payer at 65, so you usually should not delay Part B — doing so can leave claims unpaid.
  • You get an 8-month Special Enrollment Period. Once the job or the group coverage ends, an 8-month window opens to enroll in Part B with no late penalty, per CMS.
  • COBRA and retiree coverage do not count. They are not current-employment coverage. If you are on COBRA or retiree benefits at 65, enroll in Part B on time.
  • Part A is premium-free for most workers with 40 or more quarters of Medicare-taxed work — but enrolling in it ends your ability to contribute to an HSA.
  • The HSA trap is real. Part A backdates up to 6 months when you apply after 65; contributions in those months become excess and face a 6% IRS excise tax.
  • The Part B late penalty lasts for life. Without qualifying employer coverage, delaying adds 10% to the premium for each full 12 months you waited.
  • Wise Insurance Agency is the help. Texas-licensed, Houston-based, and ready to read your employer plan documents with you before you decide.
8-month The Special Enrollment Period to sign up for Medicare Part B with no late penalty — counted from the month your employment ends or your group coverage ends, whichever comes first, per CMS. Source: CMS / Medicare.gov enrollment guidance

Still working at 65 in Houston — what actually changes

Turning 65 does not force you to drop your job’s health plan, and it does not force you onto Medicare. Plenty of Houstonians keep working — nurses and researchers at the Texas Medical Center, engineers at energy companies, teachers and staff in Houston-area school districts, and owners of small businesses from the Heights to Pearland. If you are one of them, the real question is not “do I have to take Medicare?” It is “which parts make sense for me right now, and which can wait?”

A Houston professional in their late 60s still working, weighing whether to delay Medicare Part B while covered by an employer health plan
Many Houstonians keep working past 65 — Wise Insurance Agency helps them decide whether to delay Part B or enroll on time.

Medicare has separate parts, and they do not all have to start at the same time. Part A is hospital insurance and is premium-free for most workers. Part B is medical insurance — doctor visits, outpatient care, lab work — and it carries a monthly premium, $202.90 in 2026 for most people, per CMS. Because Part B costs money each month, it is the part most working people want to delay if they safely can. The rules let some people do exactly that, with no penalty, for as long as they keep qualifying employer coverage.

If you are not still working — if you have already retired, or you are on COBRA or retiree benefits — the calculation is different, and you generally should not delay. We cover that situation in our companion guide, Is Medicare mandatory at 65? This article is for people who are genuinely still on the job with active coverage.

The first thing to settle is whether your employer coverage even lets you delay. That comes down to one number.

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Medicare is not all-or-nothingYou can enroll in premium-free Part A at 65 and still delay Part B — or delay both. The parts are separate decisions. The right combination depends on your employer size, your HSA, and your drug coverage. See our Medicare eligibility page for the full breakdown of who qualifies for what.

The 20-employee rule: the line that decides if you can delay

This is the rule that matters most, so read it slowly. If you have group health coverage based on current active employment — yours or your spouse’s — and that employer has 20 or more employees, then your group plan is the primary payer and Medicare would be secondary. In that situation you can delay Medicare Part B with no late-enrollment penalty for as long as you keep that coverage.

The phrase “current active employment’ is doing heavy lifting. The coverage has to come from a job someone is actively working — you or your spouse. A pension-based retiree plan does not count. COBRA does not count. Only a plan tied to a job that is still being worked qualifies.

Two pieces both have to be true:

  • The coverage is current-employment coverage — tied to a job you or your spouse are actively working right now.
  • The employer has 20 or more employees — which makes the group plan primary and Medicare secondary for people 65 and older.

When both are true, delaying Part B is safe. You keep your work plan, you skip the $202.90 monthly Part B premium, and when the job eventually ends a Special Enrollment Period opens so you can pick up Part B with no penalty. Many large Houston employers — hospital systems, universities, energy companies, school districts — clear the 20-employee bar easily.

Can you delay Part B? The employer-size decision Can you delay Medicare Part B? Start with employer size Coverage from a job worked right now? Employer has 20+ employees Group plan is primary Employer has fewer than 20 Medicare is primary at 65 You CAN delay Part B No penalty. An 8-month SEP opens when the job ends. Usually do NOT delay Enroll in Part B at 65 or the group plan may underpay claims. COBRA and retiree coverage are not “current active employment” — they do not let you delay penalty-free.
The employer-size decision for delaying Medicare Part B, based on CMS coordination-of-benefits rules. Always confirm employer size with the benefits administrator.

One detail Houston workers ask about often: the rule looks at the employer’s total employee count, not how many people are on the health plan. A company with 35 workers where only 18 enrolled in the group plan still counts as a 20-plus employer. When in doubt, ask the benefits administrator to confirm the count in writing.

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Get it in writing from HRBefore you decide to delay Part B, ask your (or your spouse’s) benefits administrator two questions: “Does this employer have 20 or more employees?” and “Is this coverage based on current active employment?” Keep the written answer. You may also need a CMS form (the Request for Employment Information) signed by the employer when you finally enroll in Part B.

Takeaway: if both halves of the rule are true, you can delay Part B with confidence. If either half is in doubt, do not delay until you have confirmed the facts — or talked them through with a licensed agent.

Working for a small employer: why delaying Part B can backfire

The picture flips at a small employer. If the company has fewer than 20 employees, Medicare is generally the primary payer once you turn 65, and the small group plan pays second. That has a sharp consequence: if you delay Part B at a small employer, the group plan may process your claims as though Medicare were already paying its share — even though you have not enrolled. The result can be large unpaid balances that land on you.

This catches Houston small-business owners and their employees more than any other group. The owner of a six-person accounting firm in Sugar Land, a nine-person dental practice in the Heights, a small family restaurant — these employers are below the 20-employee line. If you are 65 and working at one of them, delaying Part B is usually the wrong move.

There is an important exception inside this rule. Some small employers join a multi-employer or union health plan. A few of those arrangements can still be primary. This is exactly the kind of detail you do not want to guess at — confirm it with the benefits administrator before deciding.

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Small-employer claims can go unpaidAt an employer with fewer than 20 employees, Medicare is primary at 65. If you skip Part B, the group plan can pay only the secondary share — leaving the “Medicare portion” of every bill unpaid. Do not delay Part B at a small employer without confirming, in writing, how the plan coordinates with Medicare.
Your situation at 65Who pays firstDelay Part B?
Employer with 20+ employees (you working)Group plan primary, Medicare secondaryYes — safe to delay, no penalty
Spouse’s employer with 20+ employees (spouse working)Group plan primary, Medicare secondaryYes — safe to delay, no penalty
Employer with fewer than 20 employeesMedicare primary, group plan secondaryUsually no — enroll on time
COBRA continuation coverageMedicare primaryNo — enroll on time
Retiree coverage from a former employerMedicare primaryNo — enroll on time

Takeaway: small-employer workers should treat Part B as something to enroll in at 65, not delay. Confirm your employer’s size and how the plan coordinates before you assume you can wait. Our agents review employer health coverage alongside Medicare every week — call 832-743-1318 if you are unsure where your plan stands.

Should you take premium-free Part A at 65?

Part A — hospital insurance — is premium-free for people with at least 40 quarters (about 10 years) of Medicare-taxed work, per SSA. Because there is no monthly premium, enrolling in Part A at 65 seems like an easy yes. For many working Houstonians it is. Part A can act as a small secondary layer behind your employer plan for inpatient hospital stays, and it costs nothing in premium.

But “premium-free” does not mean “consequence-free.” There is one group of people for whom enrolling in Part A at 65 is a real decision, not an automatic one: anyone contributing to a Health Savings Account. Enrolling in any part of Medicare, including premium-free Part A, ends your eligibility to contribute to an HSA. That is an IRS rule, and it is the single most common trap we see among Houston workers who keep a high-deductible health plan at work.

So the Part A decision splits cleanly:

  • No HSA contributions? Enrolling in premium-free Part A at 65 is usually fine, and many people do.
  • Still contributing to an HSA — or want to? Do not enroll in Part A yet. Coordinate the timing carefully, because of the backdating rule explained in the next section.
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Part A and Social Security are linkedIf you claim Social Security retirement benefits at or after 65, you are automatically enrolled in premium-free Part A — you cannot keep Social Security and refuse Part A. So if preserving HSA contributions matters to you, delaying your Social Security claim is part of the plan, not just delaying Medicare.

Takeaway: premium-free Part A is a benefit for most workers, but if you fund an HSA, Part A is a decision to plan — not a box to check by reflex.

The HSA trap: the 6-month lookback that catches savers

This section deserves its own heading because it surprises careful, well-organized people — the kind who fund an HSA every year precisely because they plan ahead. The trap is built into how Medicare Part A starts when you enroll after 65.

Here is the mechanism. When you enroll in premium-free Part A after 65 — or when you claim Social Security after 65, which triggers Part A automatically — Medicare does not start Part A on the day you apply. It backdates Part A coverage up to 6 months (and never earlier than the first day of your 65th-birthday month). You may think your Medicare started in, say, August, when in fact it is treated as having started the previous February.

That backdating collides with HSA rules. The IRS says you cannot contribute to an HSA for any month you are enrolled in Medicare. So every HSA contribution you made during those retroactively-covered months becomes an excess contribution. Excess contributions that are not removed are hit with a 6% IRS excise tax — charged every year until the excess is corrected. Per IRS Publication 969, this is the rule that governs HSAs and Medicare overlap.

The HSA 6-month lookback when you enroll in Part A after 65 Part A backdates up to 6 months — the HSA lookback Backdated Part A coverage — up to 6 months HSA contributions here become excess You apply for Part A / Social Security Part A officially “starts” here On Medicare 6% IRS excise tax each year on excess HSA money until removed Practical rule Stop HSA contributions 6+ months before you apply for Medicare or SS Backdating never reaches earlier than the first day of your 65th-birthday month. Source: IRS Publication 969.
How the up-to-6-month Part A backdate turns recent HSA contributions into excess contributions. Coordinate timing with a tax advisor.

The practical rule is simple, and it is the one we give every HSA saver: stop HSA contributions at least 6 months before you apply for Medicare or Social Security. If you plan to retire and enroll at, say, 66, your last HSA contribution should land at least six months before that application date. If you are turning 65 and intend to keep working and keep funding the HSA, that is fine — just do not enroll in Part A, and do not claim Social Security, while you are still contributing.

This is genuinely a tax-planning question as much as an insurance one. Loop in your CPA on the HSA contribution math; loop in a Medicare-licensed agent on the enrollment timing. The two decisions have to line up.

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The number that surprises peopleSomeone who turns 65 in January, keeps maxing their HSA all year, then claims Social Security in December can find Part A backdated to July. Six months of HSA contributions — potentially several thousand dollars — become excess, exposed to the 6% excise tax. Plan the stop date early.

Takeaway: the HSA trap is avoidable with one calendar entry — the date you stop contributing. Set it six months ahead of any Medicare or Social Security application.

The 8-month Special Enrollment Period — how the clock works

The reason delaying Part B is safe for people with qualifying employer coverage is the Special Enrollment Period, or SEP. When you finally do need Part B, the SEP lets you enroll with no late penalty — as long as you act inside the window.

The SEP gives you 8 months to enroll in Part B. The clock starts on the earlier of two events: the month your employment ends, or the month your group health coverage ends — whichever happens first. That “whichever first’ detail matters. If your job ends in May but your employer keeps your health coverage through June as a courtesy, the SEP clock still starts in May, because employment ending is the earlier event.

You can also enroll while you are still working, at any point before the job ends, without penalty. The SEP simply guarantees a penalty-free runway after the coverage stops.

The 8-month Special Enrollment Period for Part B Your 8-month Special Enrollment Period for Part B Job or coverage ends (whichever first) Month 1 Month 2 Month 3 Month 4 Month 5 Month 6 Month 7 Month 8 Enroll anywhere in these 8 months — no late penalty Window closes after month 8 Miss all 8 months and the next chance is the General Enrollment Period — with a possible lifelong late penalty. Source: CMS.
The 8-month Part B Special Enrollment Period, counted from the month employment or group coverage ends, per CMS enrollment guidance.

To enroll through the SEP you will give the Social Security Administration proof of your employer coverage. That usually means a CMS form (often called the Request for Employment Information) that your employer’s benefits administrator signs, confirming you had group coverage based on current active employment. Start gathering that paperwork before your last day, not after.

Enrollment windowWhen it appliesLate penalty risk
Initial Enrollment PeriodThe 7 months around your 65th birthdayNone if you enroll in it
While still workingAny time before the qualifying job endsNone
Special Enrollment Period8 months after job or group coverage endsNone if you enroll in it
General Enrollment PeriodJan 1 – Mar 31, if you missed every windowPossible lifelong Part B penalty

Takeaway: the SEP is a generous 8-month runway, but it is a deadline, not an open door. Mark the month your coverage ends and enroll before month eight closes.

Part D and creditable drug coverage when you delay

Part B is not the only piece you may want to delay. Part D is Medicare’s prescription drug coverage, and it has its own delay rule, separate from the Part B rules above.

You can delay Part D without a penalty if the drug coverage in your employer plan is creditable — meaning it is, on average, at least as good as standard Medicare Part D coverage. Most large-employer drug plans are creditable, but you should not assume. Each year, your benefits administrator is supposed to send a creditable-coverage notice stating whether the plan’s drug coverage is creditable or not.

Ask for that notice, read it, and keep it. If you later enroll in Part D, you may be asked to prove you had creditable coverage during the years you delayed. The notice is your proof. If your employer drug coverage is not creditable, delaying Part D can trigger a separate Part D late-enrollment penalty — so in that case you generally should not delay.

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One folder, three documentsKeep a simple folder for the three papers that protect you: the written confirmation of employer size, the signed CMS employment-information form for Part B, and every annual creditable-coverage notice for Part D. If a question ever comes up about penalties, these documents settle it.

Takeaway: delaying Part D is safe only when your employer drug coverage is creditable — get the annual notice and keep it. Our team can review your Medicare plan options, including stand-alone Part D, when the time comes to enroll.

The Part B late-enrollment penalty — what delaying wrong costs

Everything above is about delaying Part B correctly. Here is what happens when someone delays without qualifying employer coverage — for example, a person on COBRA who assumed it counted, or a small-employer worker who thought the 20-employee rule did not matter.

The Part B late-enrollment penalty adds 10% to your Part B premium for each full 12-month period you could have had Part B but did not. And it is permanent — the penalty stays on your premium for as long as you have Part B. It is not a one-time fee; it is a lifelong surcharge.

Using the 2026 standard Part B premium of $202.90 per month, per CMS, here is what the penalty looks like:

Full years delayed without coveragePenalty addedIllustrative monthly premium
0 years (enrolled on time)0%$202.90
1 year10%about $223.19
2 years20%about $243.48
3 years30%about $263.77
5 years50%about $304.35

The figures above use the 2026 standard premium for illustration; the penalty is recalculated against the standard premium each year, so the dollar amount moves with the premium. The point is the structure: a three-year mistake means paying roughly 30% more, every month, for the rest of your life. That is the cost of guessing wrong about whether you qualified to delay.

20+Employees needed for the group plan to be primary
8 moSpecial Enrollment Period after coverage ends
6 moPart A backdate that creates the HSA trap
10%Lifelong Part B penalty per full year delayed wrong

Takeaway: the penalty is the price of a wrong assumption. Confirm you qualify before you delay — the verification costs nothing; the penalty lasts forever.

Houston scenarios: TMC, energy, school districts, small business

The 20-employee line plays out differently across Houston’s major employers. Here are the situations we see most often.

Texas Medical Center and large hospital systems

A 66-year-old nurse still working at a Texas Medical Center hospital almost certainly has coverage from an employer well above 20 employees. Her group plan is primary; she can delay Part B with no penalty for as long as she keeps working. If she also funds an HSA through a high-deductible option, she should hold off on Part A and Social Security until she has planned the contribution stop date.

Energy companies downtown

A 67-year-old engineer at a downtown energy firm is in the same large-employer category. He can delay Part B safely. When a retirement package or a layoff eventually ends the job, his 8-month SEP starts that month — and he should enroll before it closes rather than leaning on any severance-related coverage, which is not current-employment coverage.

Houston-area school districts

School district employees are covered by large group plans well above the 20-employee threshold, so active district employees can generally delay Part B. The caution here is retirement: a district retiree health plan is not current-employment coverage. The day someone moves from active employee to retiree, the delay rules no longer apply — the SEP clock starts.

Small businesses across the metro

A 65-year-old part-owner of an eight-person logistics company near the Port, or an employee at a small Katy retail shop, faces the harder case. The employer is below 20 employees, Medicare is primary at 65, and delaying Part B usually means unpaid claims. For these Houstonians, enrolling in Part B on time is normally the right call.

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Where Wise servesWe meet clients across the Houston metro — from our service area in north Houston (Spring, Cypress, The Woodlands) to south Houston (Pearland, Sugar Land, Pasadena, Bellaire). Phone consultations work for anyone in Texas.

Takeaway: large Houston employers usually let you delay; small ones usually do not. Your employer’s headcount — not your job title or industry — is the deciding fact.

When to call Wise Insurance Agency

Deciding whether to delay Part B is not a one-question decision. It is employer size, plus HSA timing, plus drug-coverage credit, plus the SEP calendar — four moving parts that have to line up. Here is how working with a Texas-licensed agent at Wise actually helps.

Six to twelve months before you turn 65. Bring your employer benefits summary and a note on whether you fund an HSA. We confirm whether your (or your spouse’s) employer clears the 20-employee line, whether the drug coverage is creditable, and whether premium-free Part A makes sense for you now or should wait.

When the job is ending. We map your 8-month Special Enrollment Period, help you gather the CMS employment-information form, and time your Part B start so there is no gap and no penalty. We then walk through whether Medicare Advantage or Original Medicare with a Medicare Supplement plan fits your doctors and prescriptions.

If your situation changes. A spouse retires, you move ZIP codes, you switch from full-time to part-time — each of these can change the answer. We adjust the plan with you. We are licensed across the full range of Medicare coverage in Texas, and there is no consumer fee for this guidance — agents are paid by the carriers.

Consultation — Texas-licensed agents

Still working at 65? Let’s read your employer plan together

Before you delay Medicare Part B, have a Houston agent confirm your employer size, your HSA timing, and your Special Enrollment Period — so a wrong assumption never costs you a lifelong penalty.

Call Wise Insurance Agency 832-743-1318

Frequently asked questions

Can I delay Medicare Part B if I am still working at 65 in Houston?
Yes, if your group health coverage is based on current active employment — yours or your spouse’s — and that employer has 20 or more employees. In that case the group plan is primary, Medicare is secondary, and you can delay Part B with no late-enrollment penalty for as long as you keep that coverage. Confirm both facts with your benefits administrator before you decide, or call Wise Insurance Agency at 832-743-1318 to review your plan.
Why does the 20-employee rule matter so much?
It decides who pays first. At an employer with 20 or more employees, the group plan is the primary payer and Medicare is secondary, which makes it safe to delay Part B. At an employer with fewer than 20 employees, Medicare is generally primary once you turn 65 — so if you delay Part B, the group plan may pay claims as though Medicare were already in place, leaving you exposed to unpaid balances. Per CMS coordination-of-benefits rules, the count is the employer’s total employees, not how many people enrolled in the plan.
Does COBRA let me delay Medicare Part B?
No. COBRA and retiree coverage do not count as current-employment coverage. They do not give you a Special Enrollment Period and they do not let you delay Part B penalty-free. If you are on COBRA or retiree benefits at 65, you should enroll in Part B on time to avoid a lifelong late-enrollment penalty.
What is the 8-month Special Enrollment Period?
It is an 8-month window to enroll in Medicare Part B with no late penalty, available to people who delayed because they had qualifying employer coverage. The clock starts on the earlier of two events: the month your employment ends, or the month your group coverage ends. To enroll, you give Social Security proof of your employer coverage, usually a CMS employment-information form signed by your benefits administrator.
Can I contribute to an HSA after enrolling in Medicare?
No. Per IRS Publication 969, you cannot contribute to a Health Savings Account once you are enrolled in any part of Medicare, including premium-free Part A. You can still spend your existing HSA balance, but new contributions must stop. This is why HSA savers who plan to keep contributing should not enroll in Part A or claim Social Security while still funding the account.
What is the HSA trap with Medicare Part A backdating?
When you enroll in premium-free Part A — or claim Social Security — after 65, Medicare backdates your Part A coverage up to 6 months (never earlier than your 65th-birthday month). Any HSA contributions you made during those retroactive months become excess contributions, which face a 6% IRS excise tax each year until removed. The practical fix is to stop HSA contributions at least 6 months before you apply for Medicare or Social Security.
How much is the Part B late-enrollment penalty?
If you delay Part B without qualifying employer coverage, the penalty adds 10% to your Part B premium for each full 12-month period you could have enrolled but did not, and it lasts for as long as you have Part B. The 2026 standard Part B premium is $202.90 per month, per CMS, so a two-year delay would mean roughly a 20% surcharge on that premium for life.
Can I delay Medicare Part D drug coverage too?
Yes, if your employer drug coverage is creditable — at least as good as standard Medicare Part D. Ask your benefits administrator for the annual creditable-coverage notice and keep it as proof. If the employer drug coverage is not creditable, delaying Part D can trigger a separate Part D late-enrollment penalty, so in that case you generally should not delay.

Sources

  1. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. “Original Medicare (Part A and B) Eligibility and Enrollment.” CMS.gov. cms.gov
  2. Medicare.gov. “Working Past 65.” medicare.gov
  3. Medicare.gov. “Avoid Late Enrollment Penalties.” medicare.gov
  4. Social Security Administration. “Medicare Information.” ssa.gov/medicare
  5. Internal Revenue Service. “Publication 969 — Health Savings Accounts and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans.” irs.gov
  6. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. “2026 Medicare Parts A & B Premiums and Deductibles.” cms.gov
  7. Federal Register. “Medicare Program; Medicare Part B Monthly Actuarial Rates, Premium Rates, and Annual Deductible for 2026.” federalregister.gov