How Medigap Extends Coverage for Hospital Care

Erick Sanon • February 2, 2026

Understand the hospital coverage gaps in Medicare and how a supplement plan can help protect your finances.

One of the most pressing concerns for older adults is the rising cost of hospital care. Whether it's a sudden emergency or a long recovery from illness, extended inpatient stays can lead to serious financial strain, especially when relying on Original Medicare (Part A) alone.


While Medicare provides a strong foundation of hospital benefits, its coverage has clear time and cost limits. That's where a Medigap policy (also called Medicare Supplement Insurance) can come into play. These optional plans are designed to fill the financial "gaps" in Original Medicare. One of those gaps is hospital care beyond 60 or 90 days.


Let’s walk through how Medigap works, what it covers, and why enrolling early could make a big difference.


Medicare Part A: What’s Covered — and What Isn’t

Medicare Part A helps cover inpatient hospital care, but it does so in stages, with specific limits and rising out-of-pocket costs over time:


Days 1–60

After meeting the annual Part A deductible ($1,736 in 2026), Medicare covers:

  • A semi-private room and meals

  • General nursing care

  • Medications and supplies used during your hospital stay

  • Operating room and recovery services

  • Care provided in specialized units (e.g., ICU, coronary care unit, etc.)

  • Blood (after the first 3 pints per benefit period)

  • Inpatient lab tests and imaging

  • Inpatient rehab, if part of your treatment

With no copayments during this stage, it offers the most generous coverage, but it's limited to 60 days per benefit period.


Days 61–90

You’re responsible for a daily coinsurance of $434 in 2026. That’s over $13,000 for a 30-day stay.


Days 91–150

Medicare begins using your 60 lifetime reserve days, which is a one-time pool of extra hospital days. During this stage, the daily coinsurance jumps to $868 per day in 2026. Once those 60 days are used, they’re gone forever. This reserve is not renewed.


After Day 150

Medicare no longer pays for inpatient hospital care. All costs beyond this point are your responsibility, unless you have supplemental coverage.



Where Medigap Steps In

Medigap plans are sold by private insurance companies and are designed to supplement Original Medicare, not replace it. Most Medigap policies offer additional hospital coverage that significantly reduces your financial exposure during long or repeated hospital stays.

Here’s how:


Up to 365 Extra Hospital Days

Standard Medigap plans cover 100% of hospital costs for up to 365 additional days after your Medicare and lifetime reserve days are exhausted. That’s an entire extra year of protection.


Coinsurance Coverage

Medigap plans typically pay:

  • The $434 daily coinsurance for days 61–90

  • The $868 daily coinsurance for days 91–150

This can result in tens of thousands in savings for beneficiaries during extended hospital stays.



Important Reminders

  • The 365 additional hospital days are a lifetime benefit and are not renewed.

  • Medigap only works with Original Medicare, not Medicare Advantage (Part C).

  • Medigap does not cover long-term care or custodial nursing home care. It only applies to inpatient hospital stays. Most Medigap plans, however, do cover skilled nursing facility care costs.



Enrolling in Medigap

Timing matters. You have a 6-month Medigap open enrollment window that starts when you’re 65 or older and enrolled in Medicare Part B. During this period:

  • You’re eligible for the lowest possible premium based on age and plan type, and insurance companies must sell you any plan they have available.

  • Your medical history and preexisting conditions cannot be used to deny coverage or determine how much you pay.

After this window, you can still apply — but insurers may charge more, require medical exams, and/or decline coverage based on health status. The only exception is if you get guaranteed issue rights through a qualifying event such as moving or losing other coverage.



Final Thoughts

Hospital stays aren’t something we typically plan on — but being prepared makes all the difference. If you rely on Original Medicare alone, your financial exposure increases significantly after just 60 days in the hospital. A Medigap plan can fill that gap, protect your finances, and provide added peace of mind.




Have questions about Medigap or when to enroll? We’re here to help you find a plan that fits your needs, your budget, and your peace of mind.


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