Why You Should Work With an Independent Medicare Agent
When you start shopping for Medicare coverage, you will talk to a lot of people who call themselves Medicare agents or Medicare specialists. What most of them do not tell you upfront is that not all agents are the same. The type of agent you choose has a direct effect on the options you see and the plan you end up with.
Here is what you need to know before you sit down with anyone.
Two Types of Medicare Agents
Captive Agents
A captive agent works for one company. They represent one carrier. They can only sell you that carrier’s products.
If Humana has a Medicare Advantage plan in your area, a Humana captive agent can tell you all about it. But they cannot compare it to what Aetna or UnitedHealthcare or Cigna is offering. They are not allowed to. Their job is to sell their employer’s product.
This is not necessarily dishonest. But it is limited. If that carrier’s plan happens to be the right fit for your situation, great. If it is not, the captive agent cannot help you find something better. They will either sell you what they have or send you away.
Independent Agents (Brokers)
An independent agent, also called a broker, is not tied to any single carrier. They are licensed to represent multiple insurance companies at once.
That means when you sit down with an independent agent, they can look across carriers, compare plans side by side, and recommend the one that actually fits your needs, your budget, and your health situation.
At REMEDIGAP, we work with many of the top Medicare Supplement carriers in the country. When we recommend a plan, it is because that plan is the right fit for you, not because it is the only one we are allowed to sell.
Why This Matters More Than You Think
Here is a scenario that plays out often.
Someone sits down with a Medicare Advantage plan representative who comes to their door or calls them after they turn 65. The plan sounds good. Low Premium, maybe zero premium. Some extra benefits. They enroll.
A few years later, they are dealing with Prior authorization denials, limited networks, or rising out-of-pocket costs. They want to switch to Original Medicare with a Medigap plan. But now they face a problem: they may have to go through medical Underwriting, and with a few health conditions, they may not qualify.
If they had worked with an independent agent in the beginning, they might have gotten a full picture of all their options, including the long-term implications of Medicare Advantage versus Medigap. They could have made an informed choice.
The difference between a captive agent and an independent agent is not just about who has more options. It is about who is working for you.
What Independent Agents Can Do That Captive Agents Cannot
Shop multiple carriers at once. Medicare Supplement premiums for the same plan (say, Plan G) can vary significantly from one carrier to another, even though the benefits are identical. An independent agent can compare those rates and find you the best price for the same coverage.
Give unbiased plan comparisons. When you ask “Is this company a good fit for me?” an independent agent can give you a real answer based on your situation. A captive agent only benefits from one answer.
Help you year over year. Independent agents stay with you. When your Medigap premium increases at renewal, a good independent agent will check the market and tell you whether a better rate exists. They can help you switch carriers while keeping the same plan benefits.
Explain what you are giving up. A captive agent does not have an incentive to tell you the downsides of their product. An independent agent does, because their job is to make sure you are in the right plan, not just any plan.
How Independent Agents Are Paid
This is a common question, and it deserves a direct answer.
Independent Medicare agents are paid by insurance carriers in the form of commissions. When you enroll in a plan through an agent, the carrier pays the agent a commission. You do not pay anything extra. The premium you see is the same whether you enroll through an agent or directly with the carrier.
This means working with an independent agent costs you nothing. And it gets you expert guidance, carrier comparisons, and ongoing support that you would not have on your own.
If you want the full breakdown of how this works, read our post on How We Get Paid.
Signs You Are Talking to a Captive Agent
It can be hard to tell at first. Here are some signs.
- They only show you plans from one company
- They cannot explain why other carriers might be better or worse for your situation
- They push you toward a decision quickly, without taking time to understand your needs
- They cannot discuss Medicare Supplement and Medicare Advantage side by side
- They represent a name like “Humana agent” or “UnitedHealthcare licensed agent” rather than a general Medicare specialist
None of this means you cannot enroll with them. But you should know what you are getting.
What to Look for in an Independent Agent
A good independent Medicare agent will:
- Be licensed in your state and hold the right appointments with multiple carriers
- Take time to understand your doctors, prescriptions, budget, and health situation before recommending anything
- Show you comparisons across carriers, not just one option
- Explain the trade-offs between Medicare Advantage and Medigap honestly
- Be available after enrollment when you have questions or your situation changes. You can use the questions to ask your Medicare agent as a checklist during your first conversation
That is the standard we hold ourselves to at REMEDIGAP. We are independent. We represent multiple carriers. We work for you, not for any single insurance company.
Ready to See What Independent Advice Actually Looks Like?
There is no obligation and no pressure. We will take the time to understand your situation, walk you through your options, and give you our honest recommendation, even if that recommendation is different from what you expected.
Schedule a Free Medicare Consultation or Compare Medigap Rates Now.
Written by Michael Quinn
Licensed Broker, REMEDIGAP Founder
Fact Checked by Joann Quinn
Chief Compliance Officer
As a licensed insurance broker, REMEDIGAP upholds the principles of integrity in our editorial standards and ensures transparency in how we receive compensation from our insurance partners.

