Medicare Observation Status vs. Inpatient: Why It Matters More Than You Think
You check into the hospital feeling seriously ill. You spend three nights in a hospital bed. You assume Medicare is covering you as a hospital patient.
Then the bill arrives.
For thousands of Medicare beneficiaries every year, what they thought was a covered hospital stay turns out to have been billed as “observation services”: outpatient care, not inpatient admission. The financial difference can be enormous.
Understanding the difference between inpatient and observation status is not just academic. It can mean the difference between a manageable copay and a bill for thousands of dollars.
What Is the Difference Between Inpatient and Observation Status?
When you go to a hospital, you are not automatically “admitted” as an inpatient. The hospital and your doctor make a formal decision about your status, and that decision drives how Medicare pays.
Inpatient Status
You are officially admitted as an inpatient when a physician writes an admission order and determines that you need inpatient care. Inpatient stays are covered under Medicare Part A (hospital insurance).
Part A coverage for inpatient hospital stays includes:
- Days 1–60: You pay only the Part A Deductible ($1,736 in 2026)
- Days 61–90: A daily Coinsurance amount
- Days 91 and beyond: Lifetime reserve days apply
Observation Status
You are under observation when the hospital is monitoring you but has not formally admitted you as an inpatient. Observation stays are billed as outpatient services under Medicare Part B.
This means:
- You pay the 20% Part B coinsurance on hospital services
- You pay for meals while in the hospital (not covered under outpatient billing)
- Prescription drugs given to you in the hospital are not covered by Part A or Part B. You may be charged full price unless you have Part D
- Most significantly: the time spent under observation does not count toward the 3-day qualifying inpatient stay required for skilled nursing facility (SNF) coverage
The Skilled Nursing Facility Problem
This last point deserves its own explanation because it is where observation status can be truly devastating financially.
Medicare Part A covers skilled nursing facility (SNF) care, including physical therapy, occupational therapy, wound care, and similar services, after a hospital stay. But there is a requirement: you must have a qualifying inpatient hospital stay of at least 3 consecutive days before Medicare will pay for SNF care.
Time spent under observation does not count as inpatient days, even if you were physically in a hospital bed for those days.
Example: Mrs. Johnson, age 78, falls and is taken to the hospital. She spends four nights in the hospital under observation status. She is then discharged to a skilled nursing facility for physical therapy and rehabilitation.
Because her hospital days were classified as observation (outpatient), she does not have the required 3-day inpatient stay. Medicare does not cover her SNF care. The SNF bills her directly: potentially tens of thousands of dollars.
This scenario plays out thousands of times a year. Patients and families are often blindsided.
Why Do Hospitals Use Observation Status?
Hospitals are not simply choosing observation to harm patients. There are financial and regulatory reasons behind these decisions.
Medicare audits and “two-midnight” rule. CMS uses a guideline called the “two-midnight” rule: if a patient is expected to need hospital care spanning at least two midnights, inpatient admission is generally appropriate. For shorter stays, observation may be more appropriate under CMS guidance.
Avoiding Claim denials. If Medicare auditors later determine an inpatient admission was not Medically necessary, hospitals can face denied claims and repayment demands. To protect themselves, some hospitals default to observation status when the Medical necessity for full inpatient admission is borderline.
Discharge pressure. Hospitals are under pressure to manage length of stay. Observation status allows more flexibility in some cases.
The result is a system where the financial risk is often transferred to the patient, without the patient being clearly informed.
Are Hospitals Required to Tell You About Observation Status?
Since August 2016, hospitals are required by federal law (the NOTICE Act) to provide a written notice to Medicare patients who have been on observation status for more than 24 hours.
The notice is called the Medicare Outpatient Observation Notice (MOON). It must:
- Be given to you in writing
- Explain that you are under observation (not admitted as inpatient)
- Describe how this affects your costs
- Be delivered before discharge or after 36 hours, whichever comes first
The MOON is a step in the right direction, but many patients report not fully understanding what it means, especially when they receive it while sick or medicated.
The lesson: If you are hospitalized, ask your care team directly: “Have I been formally admitted as an inpatient, or am I under observation?” Do not assume.
How Observation Status Affects Your Costs
If you want a fuller breakdown of how Medicare cost-sharing works in general, our guide on Medicare out-of-pocket expenses, copays, and coinsurance explains the basics. Here is how observation status specifically changes your bill:
| Scenario | Medicare Part Used | Coverage Rules |
|---|---|---|
| Inpatient hospital stay | Part A | Part A deductible applies; daily coinsurance after day 60 |
| Observation (outpatient) stay | Part B | 20% coinsurance on all services after Part B deductible |
| Prescription drugs during observation | Part D (if enrolled) | May not be covered by Part B; check with your Part D plan |
| Skilled nursing facility after inpatient stay | Part A | Covered if 3-day inpatient requirement is met |
| Skilled nursing facility after observation only | Not covered | Does not meet the 3-day inpatient requirement |
How a Medigap Plan Protects You
This is where a Medicare Supplement plan provides significant value.
A Medigap Plan G covers the Part A deductible, all Part A coinsurance, and, just as importantly, covers the 20% Part B coinsurance that applies to observation status bills. So even if you are billed under Part B as an outpatient observation patient, Plan G picks up the 20%.
Without a Medigap plan, a lengthy observation stay could expose you to 20% of substantial hospital charges with no cap in Original Medicare.
However, no Medigap plan can solve the SNF problem. If you do not have the 3-day inpatient stay to qualify for SNF coverage under Part A, Medigap cannot add that qualification. The observation status rule affects both Original Medicare and Medigap in this respect.
Medicare Advantage and observation status: Medicare Advantage Plans have their own rules about observation vs. inpatient, which vary by plan. Some plans have more generous SNF qualifications. If SNF coverage after hospitalization is a concern for you, review your MA plan’s specific policy carefully, and see our side-by-side guide on Medicare Advantage vs. Medicare Supplement plans and which one suits you best to compare how each approach handles situations like this.
What Can You Do If You Are Placed Under Observation?
Ask about your status immediately. Ask your nurse, doctor, or patient advocate whether you are admitted as inpatient or under observation. The sooner you know, the more time you have to respond.
Request a status review. You can ask the hospital’s utilization review team to review whether inpatient admission is more appropriate for your situation. Bring up your specific medical needs.
Appeal if necessary. If you believe you should have been classified as inpatient, you can file an appeal after discharge. Medicare has an appeals process for claim denials, and beneficiary advocacy organizations can help.
Contact your state SHIP. Your State Health Insurance Assistance Program provides free Medicare counseling and can help you navigate an observation status dispute.
Plan ahead. If you have a planned hospital procedure, confirm with your doctor that you will be admitted as an inpatient, not placed under observation.
The NOTICE Act: What You Should Receive
If you are in the hospital under observation for more than 24 hours, the hospital is legally required to give you the Medicare Outpatient Observation Notice (MOON). If you do not receive it, ask.
The MOON will explain:
- Your current status (observation / outpatient)
- Why you are under observation rather than admitted
- How this affects your Medicare cost-sharing
- How this affects your SNF eligibility
Read it carefully. If anything is unclear, ask a patient advocate or call your SHIP counselor.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I be billed as both inpatient and outpatient during the same hospital stay?
Yes, in some cases. If you are placed under observation and then later formally admitted as an inpatient, your billing status changes from the admission date forward.
Does my Medigap plan cover observation-status hospital costs?
Plan G and similar comprehensive Medigap plans cover the 20% Part B coinsurance that applies to observation status charges. However, Medigap does not fix the SNF 3-day rule issue.
My doctor said I was admitted. How can I be under observation?
A doctor’s statement is not the same as a formal admission order. The billing classification is a separate determination made by the hospital, often by the utilization review team. Clarify the formal status in writing.
Is there any way to retroactively change my status from observation to inpatient?
You can appeal through Medicare’s appeals process. Success is not guaranteed, but it is worth pursuing, especially if SNF coverage is at stake.
Bottom Line
Observation status is a largely invisible designation that can have massive financial consequences, especially for people who need Skilled nursing care after a hospital stay. The best defense is awareness: know your status, ask questions, and understand how your Medicare coverage applies.
A comprehensive Medigap plan like Plan G provides strong protection against observation-related cost-sharing, even if it cannot change the SNF qualification rule. For anyone with concern about hospital or nursing care costs, Medigap is worth a close look.
Want to see how a Medigap plan compares in your state? Get a free quote from REMEDIGAP today.
This article is for educational purposes. Medicare billing rules and hospital policies may change. Review current Medicare guidelines at Medicare.gov or consult a licensed Medicare advisor.
💡 Your next step: Once you have Medicare, most people add a supplement plan to cover out-of-pocket costs. Compare Medicare Supplement plans to find the right fit.
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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.

