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Houston Medicare beneficiary reviewing a plan non-renewal notice and comparing 2026 coverage options

Your Medicare Advantage Plan Is Leaving in 2026: What Houston Beneficiaries Do Next

You opened the mailbox at your home in Sharpstown, Pasadena, or Kingwood, and among the September bills was an envelope from your Medicare Advantage plan. Inside, past the plan logo and the polite opening line, was a sentence that made your stomach tighten: your plan will not be offered in your area next year. It might be called a “Plan Non-Renewal Notice,” it might arrive folded into your Annual Notice of Change (ANOC), or it might be a plain plan-termination letter. Whatever it is called, the message is the same — the Medicare Advantage plan you have relied on for your doctor visits, your prescriptions, and your out-of-pocket protection is leaving, and you have to do something about it before a deadline you did not choose.

Take a breath. This is more common than it feels, it is not a mistake or a penalty aimed at you, and — this is the part the letter buries — losing your plan through no fault of your own actually opens up rights you would not otherwise have. You get a protected Special Enrollment Period. You get two clear safety nets to choose between. And, in a window many Houston beneficiaries never hear about, you get a guaranteed-issue right to buy a Medicare Supplement (Medigap) policy without medical underwriting — a door that is normally closed to people who have been on Medicare for years. This guide walks you, step by step, through exactly what the notice means, the deadlines that apply, and how Wise Insurance Agency helps Houston and Harris County beneficiaries turn a stressful letter into a calm, deliberate decision.

Key takeaways
  • A non-renewal is not your fault, and it triggers a protected Special Enrollment Period (SEP). When your plan leaves, CMS gives you an SEP that runs December 8 through the last day of February to pick new coverage.
  • You have two safety nets: switch to another Medicare Advantage plan, or return to Original Medicare and add a stand-alone Part D drug plan (and, ideally, a Medigap policy).
  • Losing your plan involuntarily opens a Medigap guaranteed-issue window — you can buy certain Medicare Supplement plans without medical underwriting from 60 days before your coverage ends to 63 days after it ends.
  • Act by December 31 to avoid a gap in coverage. If you do nothing, you are moved to Original Medicare on January 1 — with no drug plan and no supplement.
  • KFF reports the average beneficiary has 32 MA-PD plans for 2026, down from 34 in 2025, with the two largest insurers exiting more counties than they enter — so plan exits are a national story, not just yours.
  • Wise Insurance Agency is your help — we compare every option against your doctors, drugs, and budget before the clock runs out.
Dec 8Feb 28 The Special Enrollment Period you receive when your Medicare Advantage plan is non-renewed. It runs from December 8 through the last day of February, giving you a protected window to choose new coverage. Source: Medicare.gov. Source: Medicare.gov Special Enrollment Periods

1. What a non-renewal, ANOC, or termination notice actually means

Every fall, Medicare Advantage and Part D plans send required mailings that spell out what is changing for the coming year. Most of the time these are routine. But if your plan is leaving your service area, one of these documents will tell you so — and it is worth understanding which is which so you do not miss the signal.

Houston Medicare beneficiary reviewing a plan non-renewal notice and comparing 2026 coverage options
Wise Insurance Agency helps Houston beneficiaries whose Medicare Advantage plan is leaving compare their 2026 options before the deadline.

The Annual Notice of Change (ANOC) arrives in September and describes how your existing plan will change for January — premiums, copays, drug tiers, and networks. If your plan is continuing but changing, the ANOC is where you learn it. A Plan Non-Renewal Notice or plan-termination letter is different: it tells you the plan itself will not be available to you next year, because the insurer is pulling it out of your county or ending it entirely. That is the letter that starts the clock in this guide.

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Non-renewal is not the same as being dropped for causeYou are not losing coverage because of anything you did. The insurer made a business decision to stop offering that plan where you live. Because the loss is involuntary, Medicare rules give you extra protections — the very Special Enrollment Period and Medigap rights this guide is built around.

Here is how the three notices compare, so you can identify what landed in your mailbox:

NoticeWhen it arrivesWhat it tells you
Annual Notice of Change (ANOC)By late SeptemberYour plan continues, but premiums, copays, drug tiers, or networks are changing for January
Plan Non-Renewal NoticeEarly fall (by early October)Your plan will not be offered in your area next year; you must choose new coverage
Plan-termination letterEarly fallThe plan is ending entirely; you lose this coverage on December 31 unless you act

If you are still not sure which one you received, that alone is a good reason to have someone read it with you. Our team reviews these letters with Houston clients every fall and can tell you in minutes whether your plan is continuing, changing, or leaving. Start at our Medicare hub or call us directly.

2. How common are 2026 Medicare Advantage plan exits?

It helps to know you are not alone. Nationally, 2026 is a year of real contraction in the Medicare Advantage market. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), the average Medicare beneficiary can choose from 32 Medicare Advantage prescription drug (MA-PD) plans in 2026, two fewer than the 34 available in 2025. The two largest insurers, UnitedHealthcare and Humana, are exiting more counties than they are entering, each pulling back to offering plans in roughly 80% of U.S. counties, down from nearly 90% the year before. KFF further estimates that about 13% of MA-PD enrollees — roughly 2.6 million people nationwide — are in a plan being terminated for 2026 and will not be automatically moved into a replacement.

What that means for you in Harris County is simple: a plan leaving is a routine market event this year, not a red flag about your health or your eligibility. The reassuring flip side, also from KFF, is that the overwhelming majority of affected beneficiaries still have other Medicare Advantage options available where they live. The task is not to panic; it is to compare what is left carefully and pick the option that fits your doctors, your prescriptions, and your budget.

Average MA-PD plans available per beneficiary Choice is narrowing: two fewer plans on average for 2026 34 plans 2025 32 plans 2026 Source: Kaiser Family Foundation, Medicare Advantage 2026 plan offerings.
Figure: The average beneficiary has 32 MA-PD plans in 2026 versus 34 in 2025 — a modest but real narrowing of choice. Source: KFF.

3. Your Special Enrollment Period: the exact dates

Here is the single most important thing to understand about a non-renewal: it hands you a protected Special Enrollment Period (SEP) that other beneficiaries do not get. When your plan leaves Medicare or stops serving your area, Medicare.gov states you get an SEP that runs from December 8 through the last day of February to switch to a new Medicare Advantage plan, a new Medicare drug plan, or back to Original Medicare. For the 2026 plan year, that window is December 8, 2025 through February 28, 2026.

That SEP does not replace the two enrollment windows you already have — it sits on top of them. It is easy to blur these together, so here is how the three windows relate:

Enrollment windowDates (for 2026)What you can do
Annual Enrollment Period (AEP)Oct 15 – Dec 7, 2025Anyone on Medicare can join, switch, or drop a Medicare Advantage or Part D plan
Non-renewal SEPDec 8, 2025 – Feb 28, 2026Because your plan is leaving, you get extra time to pick a new MA plan, a drug plan, or Original Medicare
Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment (MA OEP)Jan 1 – Mar 31, 2026If you are already in an MA plan on Jan 1, you can make one switch (to another MA plan or to Original Medicare + Part D)

In plain terms: your strongest first move is to use the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 – December 7) to choose replacement coverage that starts cleanly on January 1. The non-renewal SEP (December 8 – February 28) is your safety cushion if you miss that, or if you need to change course after the year begins. And the MA Open Enrollment Period gives most beneficiaries one more chance to adjust through March 31. The goal is to have your new coverage locked in before December 31 so there is no day where you are uninsured.

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Do not wait until FebruaryEven though the SEP runs into late February, waiting can create a coverage gap. If you have not chosen a new plan by December 31, you are automatically shifted to Original Medicare on January 1 — with no Part D drug coverage and no supplement in place. Picking during AEP, before December 7, keeps everything seamless.
Your three enrollment windows for 2026 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar AEP: Oct 15 – Dec 7 Non-renewal SEP: Dec 8 – Feb 28 MA OEP: Jan 1 – Mar 31 Aim to enroll by Dec 31
Figure: The three windows overlap. Choosing during AEP (by Dec 7) gives seamless January coverage; the non-renewal SEP and MA OEP are your cushions. Source: Medicare.gov.

4. Your two safety nets, side by side

When your plan leaves, you are really choosing between two paths. There is no universally “right” one — the right answer depends on your doctors, your prescriptions, your travel, and how much predictability you want. Here are the two nets.

Safety net A: Another Medicare Advantage plan

You can move to a different Medicare Advantage plan offered in your area. This keeps you in the all-in-one structure you are used to: medical, usually drug coverage, and often extras like dental, vision, or a fitness benefit, typically through a network of Houston-area providers. The key homework is confirming that your doctors and hospitals are in the new plan’s network and that your medications are on its formulary at a tier you can afford.

Safety net B: Original Medicare + Part D + Medigap

Alternatively, you can return to Original Medicare (Parts A and B), add a stand-alone Part D prescription drug plan, and — this is the piece that makes this path powerful right now — add a Medicare Supplement (Medigap) policy. Original Medicare lets you see any provider nationwide who accepts Medicare, with no network. A Medigap policy then fills in much of what Original Medicare leaves you to pay, making your costs far more predictable. The catch is that Medigap normally requires you to pass medical underwriting — but as the next section explains, your plan leaving may hand you a rare guaranteed-issue right to skip that.

FeatureAnother Medicare Advantage planOriginal Medicare + Part D + Medigap
Provider accessPlan network (verify your doctors)Any provider nationwide who accepts Medicare
Drug coverageUsually built inSeparate stand-alone Part D plan
Extra benefitsOften dental, vision, fitnessNot included; medical predictability instead
Monthly cost structureOften lower premium, pay-as-you-go copaysHigher premium, fewer surprise bills
Medigap medical underwritingNot applicableOften required — unless a guaranteed-issue right applies
The choice is personal, not one-size-fits-allSomeone who travels often or wants any-doctor freedom may lean toward Original Medicare with Medigap. Someone who values built-in extras and a lower monthly premium may prefer another Medicare Advantage plan. We map both paths against your exact doctors, drugs, and budget so the decision is clear.

5. The Medigap guaranteed-issue window you may not know you have

This is the section most beneficiaries never hear about, and it can matter more than anything else in your letter. Normally, if you want to buy a Medicare Supplement policy after your one-time Medigap Open Enrollment (the six months around when you first turned 65 and enrolled in Part B), the insurer can put you through medical underwriting — reviewing your health history and potentially charging you more or turning you down. But federal law grants guaranteed-issue rights in certain situations, and losing Medicare Advantage coverage through no fault of your own is one of them.

Per Medicare.gov, when your Medicare Advantage plan leaves Medicare or stops giving care in your area, you have a guaranteed-issue right to buy certain Medigap policies without medical underwriting. The window runs from 60 days before your coverage ends to 63 days after it ends. Under federal rules, the guaranteed-issue Medigap options in this situation are Plans A, B, C, D, F, G, K, or L — with one important caveat: Plans C and F are only available if you became eligible for Medicare before January 1, 2020. If you became eligible on or after that date, Plan G is generally the most comprehensive guaranteed-issue option available to you.

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Two different guaranteed-issue paths, two different clocksThe plan-termination path (your plan leaves) gives you the 60-days-before to 63-days-after window described here. Separately, the MA “trial right” applies if you joined a Medicare Advantage plan for the very first time when you were new to Medicare and want to switch back to Original Medicare and Medigap within your first 12 months. Both are guaranteed-issue rights; which one fits you depends on your history. We help you confirm which clock you are on.
Guaranteed-issue triggerWindowMedigap plans available
Your MA plan leaves Medicare or stops serving your area (non-renewal)60 days before coverage ends to 63 days after it endsA, B, C*, D, F*, G, K, or L
MA “trial right” — you joined MA when first eligible and switch back within 12 monthsWithin the first 12 months of joining MAAny Medigap plan sold in your state by any company (C* and F* only if eligible before 2020)
You move out of your plan’s service areaAround the move; confirm exact datesA, B, C*, D, F*, G, K, or L

*Medigap Plans C and F are available only to people who became eligible for Medicare before January 1, 2020.

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The 63-day clock is unforgivingIf you let the guaranteed-issue window close — more than 63 days after your Medicare Advantage coverage ends — an insurer can again require medical underwriting on a Medigap application. That can mean a higher premium or a denial based on your health. This is precisely why timing your decision, not just making it, is so important. Bring your letter to us early.
The Medigap guaranteed-issue window when your MA plan leaves No medical underwriting inside this window — a rare, time-limited door Opens 60 days before coverage ends Dec 31 coverage ends Closes 63 days after coverage ends
Figure: The guaranteed-issue window opens 60 days before your Medicare Advantage coverage ends and closes 63 days after. Source: Medicare.gov Medigap guaranteed-issue rights.

6. The deadline timeline, month by month

Deadlines are the whole game here. Miss them and your options shrink; hit them and you keep every protection. Here is the sequence for a plan leaving at the end of 2025 for the 2026 plan year.

WhenWhat happens / what to do
By late September 2025Your ANOC and any non-renewal/termination notice arrive. Read them; identify whether your plan is leaving.
Oct 15 – Dec 7, 2025Annual Enrollment Period. Choose replacement coverage now for a clean January 1 start.
By Dec 31, 2025Have new coverage locked in to avoid any gap. If you want Medigap, the guaranteed-issue window is open around this date.
Jan 1, 2026Old plan ends. If you did nothing, you default to Original Medicare with no drug plan and no supplement.
Dec 8, 2025 – Feb 28, 2026Non-renewal SEP — your cushion to pick or change new coverage.
Within 63 days after coverage endsLast chance to use your Medigap guaranteed-issue right without medical underwriting.
Jan 1 – Mar 31, 2026MA Open Enrollment — if you are in an MA plan, one more chance to switch.
One simple rule to rememberIf you take one thing from this timeline, make it this: decide before December 7 if you possibly can. Choosing during the Annual Enrollment Period gives you seamless January coverage and keeps the Medigap door open. Everything after that is a backup, not a plan.

7. The 2026 cost figures to plan around

Whichever path you choose, a few verified 2026 numbers shape your budget. If you return to Original Medicare, you will pay the standard Part B premium, and your stand-alone Part D drug plan carries its own protections. These are the figures published by CMS and Medicare.gov for the 2026 plan year.

$202.902026 standard monthly Part B premium
$2,1002026 Part D annual out-of-pocket cap
$38.992026 Part D national base beneficiary premium
63Days after coverage ends to use your Medigap guaranteed-issue right

The Part B premium is $202.90 per month for 2026, up from $185.00 in 2025, per the official CMS 2026 Medicare Parts A & B fact sheet. On the drug side, whichever Part D route you take, your out-of-pocket spending on covered drugs is capped at $2,100 for 2026 — once you hit it, covered Part D drugs cost you $0 for the rest of the year, per Medicare.gov. The Part D national base beneficiary premium is $38.99 for 2026, a figure CMS uses in setting Part D premiums and any late-enrollment penalty. If you were on Medicare Advantage with drug coverage and move to Original Medicare, remember you now need a separate Part D plan to keep that drug protection and to avoid a lifelong late-enrollment penalty.

2026 figureAmountWhy it matters when your plan leaves
Standard Part B premium$202.90/monthYou pay this on Original Medicare and on most MA plans; budget for it either way
Part D out-of-pocket cap$2,100/yearHard ceiling on covered drug costs under any Part D or MA-PD plan in 2026
Part D national base beneficiary premium$38.99/monthReference figure CMS uses for Part D premiums and the late-enrollment penalty
Medigap guaranteed-issue window60 days before – 63 days afterThe rare window to buy a supplement without medical underwriting
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Do not accidentally drop your drug coverageIf you leave Medicare Advantage for Original Medicare and forget to enroll in a stand-alone Part D plan, you can face a permanent Part D late-enrollment penalty later — and you would have no drug coverage in the meantime. Pairing Part D with your Original Medicare choice is not optional; it is part of the plan.

8. What to do next in Houston and Harris County

A non-renewal letter is really an invitation to make a better-informed choice than you might have made on autopilot. The plan you had may not have been the strongest fit anyway; this is your chance to compare what is actually available in Harris County against your real doctors, real prescriptions, and real budget. But the comparison has to happen inside the deadlines, and it has to weigh a lot of moving parts — networks, formularies, tiers, premiums, and whether the Medigap guaranteed-issue door applies to you.

That is exactly the work Wise Insurance Agency does with Houston beneficiaries every fall. We sit down with your letter, confirm which notice you received, check whether your physicians and medications line up with each available plan, and tell you plainly whether Safety Net A or Safety Net B fits your life better — all before the clock runs out. If Medigap guaranteed-issue applies to you, we make sure you use that window rather than lose it. You can start by exploring your Medicare plan options, confirming your Medicare eligibility details, or reaching out through our contact page. You can also email us at sara@wisehealthins.com.

Houston Plan-Exit Review

Your Medicare Advantage plan is leaving? Let’s find your next one.

Wise Insurance Agency helps Houston and Harris County beneficiaries whose plan is non-renewed compare every 2026 option — another MA plan, or Original Medicare with Part D and Medigap — and use every deadline and guaranteed-issue right before it closes, at no cost to you.

Call our Houston offices 832-400-6538

Frequently asked questions

What does it mean if my Medicare Advantage plan is “non-renewed” for 2026?
It means the insurer has decided to stop offering that particular plan where you live for the 2026 plan year. It is a business decision by the plan, not a penalty or anything you did wrong. Because the loss is involuntary, Medicare gives you extra protections: a Special Enrollment Period running December 8 through the last day of February, and in most cases a guaranteed-issue right to buy certain Medigap policies without medical underwriting. You will receive the news in a Plan Non-Renewal Notice or plan-termination letter, usually by early October.
What is the exact Special Enrollment Period when my plan leaves?
Per Medicare.gov, when your plan leaves Medicare or stops serving your area, you get a Special Enrollment Period that runs from December 8 through the last day of February — for the 2026 plan year, that is December 8, 2025 through February 28, 2026. During it you can switch to another Medicare Advantage plan, a stand-alone Medicare drug plan, or return to Original Medicare. To avoid a coverage gap, aim to choose during the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 – December 7) so your new coverage starts cleanly on January 1.
Can I buy a Medigap policy without medical underwriting if my plan is terminating?
In most cases, yes. Losing Medicare Advantage coverage because your plan leaves Medicare or stops serving your area is a guaranteed-issue situation under federal law. You can buy certain Medigap policies — Plans A, B, C, D, F, G, K, or L — without medical underwriting. The window runs from 60 days before your coverage ends to 63 days after it ends. Plans C and F are available only if you became eligible for Medicare before January 1, 2020; if you became eligible after that, Plan G is generally the most comprehensive guaranteed-issue option.
How long is the Medigap guaranteed-issue window?
When your Medicare Advantage plan leaves, the guaranteed-issue window runs from 60 days before your coverage ends to 63 days after it ends, according to Medicare.gov. If you apply after the 63-day mark, an insurer can again require medical underwriting, which may mean a higher premium or a denial based on your health. That is why timing your Medigap decision — not just making it — matters so much. Applying early, ideally before your coverage ends, keeps your options open.
What happens if I do nothing after my plan is non-renewed?
If you take no action, you will be moved to Original Medicare (Parts A and B) on January 1, but with no Part D prescription drug plan and no Medicare Supplement in place. That leaves you exposed to full out-of-pocket costs on the Original Medicare side and no drug coverage — which can also trigger a permanent Part D late-enrollment penalty later. Doing nothing is rarely a wise choice. It is far better to review your options during the Annual Enrollment Period and choose deliberately.
Should I switch to another Medicare Advantage plan or go back to Original Medicare?
It depends on your priorities. Another Medicare Advantage plan keeps the all-in-one structure with usually built-in drug coverage and often extras like dental and vision, through a provider network you should verify. Original Medicare with a stand-alone Part D plan and a Medigap policy gives you any-provider access nationwide and more predictable costs, but a higher monthly premium. Because your plan is leaving, you may also have a guaranteed-issue right to Medigap right now — which can tip the decision. A personal review of your doctors, drugs, and budget makes the right path clear.
How does the non-renewal SEP relate to the Annual Enrollment Period and MA Open Enrollment?
They stack. The Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 – December 7) is when anyone can change plans for January 1. The non-renewal SEP (December 8 – February 28) is extra time you receive because your plan is leaving. The Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (January 1 – March 31) lets someone already in an MA plan make one more switch. Your smartest move is to choose during AEP for a seamless January start; the SEP and MA OEP are cushions if you need more time or want to change course.
How much will Original Medicare cost me in 2026 if I switch back?
The standard Part B premium for 2026 is $202.90 per month, and if you add a stand-alone Part D drug plan, your covered-drug out-of-pocket spending is capped at $2,100 for the year. The Part D national base beneficiary premium for 2026 is $38.99, which CMS uses in setting Part D premiums and penalties. Your actual total also depends on whether you add a Medigap policy and which one. We can build out the real monthly number for your situation so there are no surprises.

Wise Insurance Agency is a licensed insurance agency in the State of Texas. The information here is general guidance and not a substitute for plan-specific advice. 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, 1-800-MEDICARE, or your local State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) to get information on all of your options. Enrollment windows, guaranteed-issue rights, Medigap plan availability, premiums, formularies, networks, and program rules change and are subject to federal and state action; the dates and figures in this article reflect 2026 plan-year data as published by CMS and Medicare.gov as of the date it was written. Medigap plan availability and rules vary by state. Verify current rules with your plan, with CMS, or with a licensed agent before making any decision.