Medicare Supplement Plan K: 2026 Coverage and Costs Explained
Medicare Supplement Plan K is a standardized Medigap policy that pays 100% of your Part A hospital coinsurance but only 50% of most other gaps — like the Part A deductible, Part B coinsurance, and skilled nursing coinsurance — until you hit a yearly out-of-pocket limit of $8,000 in 2026, after which it covers 100% of approved costs for the rest of the year.
What Plan K covers (and what it doesn't)
Medigap Plan K is one of the federally standardized Medicare Supplement plans. That means the benefits are set by law and are identical from one insurer to the next — only the premium, the company, and the service differ. What sets Plan K apart from richer plans like Plan G is its cost-sharing design: instead of covering most gaps in full, it splits many of them with you at 50% until you reach an annual ceiling.
Plan K does not cover the Part B deductible ($283 in 2026), Part B excess charges, or foreign travel emergency care. You pay your Original Medicare premiums separately, and Plan K does not include prescription drug coverage — you would add a stand-alone Part D plan for that.
- Part A hospital coinsurance and costs up to an additional 365 days after Medicare benefits end: 100%
- Part A deductible ($1,736 per benefit period in 2026): 50%
- Part B coinsurance or copayment (generally 20% under Original Medicare): 50%
- First 3 pints of blood: 50%
- Part A hospice coinsurance or copayment: 50%
- Skilled nursing facility coinsurance ($217/day for days 21–100 in 2026): 50%
- Part B deductible: not covered
- Part B excess charges: not covered
- Foreign travel emergency: not covered
The $8,000 out-of-pocket limit in 2026
Plan K's defining safety net is its annual out-of-pocket maximum. For 2026, CMS set this limit at $8,000. Once your share of cost-sharing on covered services reaches that amount in a calendar year — and once you've also met the Part B deductible — Plan K pays 100% of covered services for the rest of the year.
This limit is what makes the 50% cost-sharing tolerable: in a catastrophic year, your exposure on Plan-K-covered services is capped rather than open-ended. CMS recalculates the limit each year using an inflation adjustment tied to Medicare per-capita costs, so it generally rises over time. The limit does not include your monthly premiums or anything Plan K doesn't cover, such as the Part B deductible or Part D drug costs.
How your costs add up under Plan K
Because Plan K pays only half of several major charges, it helps to walk through where your dollars go. Under Original Medicare in 2026, the Part A deductible is $1,736 per benefit period and the Part B deductible is $283 per year, after which Part B generally leaves you responsible for 20% coinsurance.
With Plan K, you would pay half of that $1,736 Part A deductible (about $868) if you're hospitalized, and half of your Part B coinsurance on doctor and outpatient services — plus the full Part B deductible, which Plan K never covers. Those 50% shares count toward the $8,000 limit. Healthy years with few claims keep your costs low; a serious illness pushes you toward the cap, where Plan K then takes over fully.
- You still pay the full Part B premium — $202.90/month in 2026 — directly to Medicare.
- You pay the full Part B deductible of $283 before Part B coverage begins; Plan K does not reimburse it.
- Your 50% shares of covered gaps accumulate toward the $8,000 ceiling.
- Premiums you pay for the Plan K policy itself do not count toward the out-of-pocket limit.
Who Plan K tends to fit
Plan K can appeal to people who are relatively healthy, want a lower monthly premium, and are comfortable self-insuring part of the risk up to a known annual cap. The $8,000 ceiling provides a backstop against a catastrophic year, which some buyers value more than first-dollar coverage.
It may be a weaker fit if you expect frequent care or want predictable, minimal cost-sharing — in those cases a plan that covers more gaps in full may cost less over a year despite a higher premium. The best choice is individual and depends on your health, budget, and risk tolerance. It's worth comparing Plan K against Plan G, Plan N, and Plan L before deciding.
Frequently asked questions
Does Plan K cover the Part B deductible?
No. Plan K does not cover the Part B deductible, which is $283 in 2026. You pay that amount in full each year before Part B coverage begins, and it does not count toward Plan K's $8,000 out-of-pocket limit.
What is Plan K's out-of-pocket limit for 2026?
CMS set the 2026 out-of-pocket limit for Plan K at $8,000. After your cost-sharing reaches that amount — and after you've met the Part B deductible — Plan K pays 100% of covered services for the remainder of the calendar year.
How is Plan K different from Plan L?
Both share the cost-splitting design, but Plan L covers 75% of most gaps (versus Plan K's 50%) and has a lower out-of-pocket limit. Plan L therefore usually carries a higher premium. Compare both against your expected use of care.
Does Plan K include prescription drug coverage?
No Medigap plan, including Plan K, covers prescription drugs. For drug coverage you would enroll in a separate Medicare Part D plan, which has its own premium — the national base is $38.99/month in 2026 — and an annual out-of-pocket cap of $2,100.
Are Plan K benefits the same from every insurer?
Yes. Plan K is federally standardized, so the benefits are identical no matter which company sells it. Premiums, customer service, and pricing methods differ, so it pays to compare quotes for the same Plan K coverage.
Sources
Related guides
What Is Medigap (Medicare Supplement Insurance)?
Medigap (Supplement) PlansMedigap Plan G vs. Plan N: Which Should You Choose?
Medigap (Supplement) PlansMedigap Pricing Explained: Community-Rated vs. Issue-Age vs. Attained-Age
Medigap (Supplement) PlansMedicare Plan F vs. Plan G: How to Choose in 2026
Medicare Login Guide is an independent resource and is not affiliated with or endorsed by Medicare, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or any government agency. This article is for general information only — confirm current figures and your specific options at medicare.gov or by calling 1-800-MEDICARE.