Questions to Ask Your Medicare Agent (Before You Enroll in Anything)
Here is something most insurance agents hope you do not know: the questions you ask before enrolling matter more than the questions you ask after.
Once you are enrolled in a Medicare plan, switching can be complicated. In many states, if you want to change your Medigap plan after your open enrollment window closes, you will face medical Underwriting. If you enrolled in Medicare Advantage, switching back to Original Medicare has its own set of challenges.
The time to ask hard questions is before you sign anything.
Below are the questions we think every Medicare beneficiary should ask any agent, including us. If an agent cannot answer these directly, or if the answers seem evasive, that tells you something important.
About the Agent
“Are you an independent agent or do you work for a single carrier?”
This is the most important question on this list. An independent agent can compare plans across carriers. A captive agent can only sell you what their employer offers. The distinction shapes every recommendation you receive.
If they say they are independent, follow up: “Which carriers are you licensed to sell?” A real independent agent should be able to name several.
“How long have you been working with Medicare clients?”
Medicare is a complex system. An agent who specializes in Medicare, and has for years, understands the nuances that a generalist who also sells life insurance and auto coverage might not.
“Will you be my ongoing contact after I enroll, or will I be handed off to a service center?”
This question separates agents who care about the relationship from agents who want the commission and move on. You want a real person who knows your situation and is available when you need them.
About Your Plan Options
“What are the trade-offs between Medicare Advantage and Medicare Supplement for my specific situation?”
This question tells you whether the agent is willing to be honest about downsides. Every plan has trade-offs. If an agent only tells you about the benefits and nothing about the limitations, be cautious.
“If I choose Medicare Advantage and later want to switch to a Medigap plan, how difficult will that be?”
If the agent says “no problem, you can switch anytime,” that is not accurate. Switching from Medicare Advantage to Medigap usually requires medical underwriting after your initial trial period. A good agent will explain this clearly upfront.
“Does this Medigap plan come with rate increase history? How have premiums changed over the past few years?”
Medigap premiums increase over time. Carriers have different track records when it comes to rate stability. An honest agent will share historical rate information and help you understand what you might expect.
About Your Specific Doctors and Prescriptions
“Will my current doctors be covered under the plan you are recommending?”
For Medicare Supplement: yes, any doctor who accepts Medicare will see you. That is one of its key advantages. For Medicare Advantage: the answer depends on the network, and you need to verify each provider.
“Does this plan cover my prescription drugs?”
Medicare Supplement plans do not include drug coverage. You will need a separate Part D plan. Medicare Advantage Plans often include drug coverage but have formularies that may not cover all your medications. Ask the agent to check your specific drugs.
“What will my out-of-pocket costs look like in an average year? And in a high-use year?”
This is where Medicare Advantage plans often look very different from how they were sold. Ask for a realistic worst-case scenario. What is the maximum out-of-pocket? What would a hospital stay cost? What would a specialist visit cost?
With Medigap Plan G, the answer to the high-use scenario is: the Part B Deductible ($283 in 2026) and that is it. Ask for the same kind of clarity from any plan being recommended.
About Cost and Compensation
“How are you compensated if I enroll?”
A trustworthy agent will tell you directly: they earn a commission from the carrier. You do not pay more because of it. The Premium is the same either way. An agent who is evasive about this is a red flag.
“Will you help me review my premium at renewal time to make sure I am still getting a competitive rate?”
If the answer is no, or if they seem uncertain, that tells you this agent is focused on the enrollment and not the relationship. A good agent reviews rates with you annually.
How We Answer These Questions at REMEDIGAP
We are independent agents. Learn more about what independent agents can do for you. We represent multiple carriers and we will tell you honestly which one fits your situation better.
We stay with our clients after enrollment. We review rates at renewal. We answer the phone when something comes up.
If you want to put us through the questions above, we welcome it. That is exactly the kind of conversation we want to have.
Schedule a Free Medicare Consultation and ask us anything.
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.

