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The Medicare Rights Center applauds the recent introduction of the Beneficiary Enrollment Notification and Eligibility Simplification (BENES) 2.0 Act (H.R. 4960) in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Led by Reps. Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), Raul Ruiz, M.D. (D-CA), Dwight Evans (D-PA), and Brad Schneider (D-IL), this bipartisan bill would require the federal government to provide advance notice to people approaching Medicare eligibility about basic enrollment rules, filling a longstanding gap in outreach and education.
While most older adults and people with disabilities are automatically enrolled in Medicare Part B, a growing number are not. These individuals must make an active enrollment choice, taking into consideration specific timelines, complex Medicare rules, and their existing coverage.
Beneficiaries may face financial penalties, higher-than-expected medical costs, and lapses in health coverage.
Far too many people make mistakes when trying to navigate this confusing system. Every year, the Medicare Rights Center’s national helpline hears from people who believed they were following the rules, only to discover too late they missed a key deadline or decision point. The consequences can be severe: Beneficiaries may face steep financial penalties, higher-than-expected medical costs, and lapses in health coverage. For many, these missteps are rooted in a lack of timely, actionable enrollment information.
The BENES 2.0 Act would help prevent these costly errors by empowering informed enrollment and coverage choices. In ensuring that people nearing Medicare eligibility receive critical guidance about how and when to enroll, the BENES 2.0 Act offers a common-sense solution to an enduring and widespread issue. Its policies build upon the successes and goals of the original BENES Act, further modernizing Medicare enrollment to bolster enrollee health, well-being, and economic security.
With the U.S. population aging rapidly and more people working later in life, fewer people are automatically enrolling in Medicare than in the past. These shifts make effective outreach and education ever more urgent.
In 2021, nearly 780,000 Medicare beneficiaries were paying a Part B Late Enrollment Penalty that increased their monthly premium by around 27%. Because the penalty applies as long as the individual has Part B, it is effectively lifelong. Without action, such hardships will only mount.
We look forward to working together to bring the BENES 2.0 Act’s important reforms to life.
The Medicare Rights Center thanks Representatives Bilirakis, Ruiz, Evans, and Schneider for their leadership on this issue. We look forward to working together to bring the BENES 2.0 Act’s important reforms to life.
We welcome thoughtful, respectful discussion on our website. To maintain a safe and constructive environment, comments that include profanity or violent, threatening language will be hidden. We may ban commentors who repeatedly cross these guidelines.
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10 Comments on “New Bipartisan Bill Would Improve Medicare Enrollment”
John C Carson
August 21, 2025 at 5:29 pmThus is all fine and but the problem is a lot of people don’t read the stuff and if they do they have no idea what it means because it’s not in terms they may understand. Some understanding test need to be done before they start sending out notices. I’ve worked with Medicare coverage for 40 years so ask me.
Paul R
August 21, 2025 at 5:54 pmI support John C Carson’s comment. I was a SHIP (HICAP) counselor in California, for 6 years. The clients I worked with who were proactive, signed up for 1:1 counseling and attended information sessions were also people who could navigate the the path Medicare and simply wanted a review of their decision making. The average American reads at a 7th- to 8th-grade level, and has limited financial literacy.
Lori Stefano
August 21, 2025 at 5:58 pmMy brother died of cancer because he accidentally checked the wrong box for Medicare Part B and had no insurance coverage when he deveoped oropharyngeal cancer. This is a bill whose time has definitely come!
Jeff F.
August 21, 2025 at 9:16 pmI’m a SHIPs navigator in Colorado. I completely agree with John and Paul. The Medicare and You annual publication is readily available in print and online, yet is still quite confusing to most of my clients. To make matters worse, the FY26 HHS proposed budget zeros out the SHIPs program.
Jean
August 22, 2025 at 11:57 amthank heavens HHS put SHIPs back in for funding
Lynda Young
August 22, 2025 at 1:32 amI hope the New Bipartisan Bill includes information about to contact and what they do SHIP/SHINE/HICAP and other helpers for new to Medicare. It isn’t an intuitive yet vital program.
Marci H.
August 22, 2025 at 9:33 amI support this effort and applaud you! I work with older adults and it is true that many don’t read their mail due to the mass marketing and scams towards Medicare eligible individuals. Any literature made available needs to be simple, direct, and provide information about how to contact someone to help them through the complex decision making process. SHIP Counselors are unbiased and can help! Yet, without significant funding, SHIP Counselors may not be available.
Terry Smerling
August 22, 2025 at 4:14 pmI’m a Medicare broker, living in PA but licensed in many other states. We see people getting themselves ‘in a pickle’ all the time. Brokers are here to help and there is never a fee to work with a broker (by Federal law). If you’re not sure what some documentation is saying, please find help.
Patricia Bush
August 25, 2025 at 4:02 pmI, too, am a Medicare Agent and would love to see an Agent listing (by zipcode) on the Medicare site so folks can tap into the professionals.
Dianne M
August 28, 2025 at 2:02 pmI have been a SHIP counselor in California, and am currently a SHIP Counselor in Kansas. I have been amazed at the difference in experience from state to state. Medicare is a standard benefit across the country, but is not experienced the same way across the country. In states and areas within states the Medicare experience is very different. Also, the Medicare and You book that is published is very confusing with crazy details that are misleading or unnecessary. I know that I help individuals cut through the chatter and understand how the rules apply to them so that they can make a choice that makes sense.