Health Care for Retirees

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As a retiree you have several health care benefits to choose from. These include VA provided medical benefits, Tricare and other supplemental health care insurance options.

Retirees and their families remain eligible to use civilian health care facilities under Tricare. Tricare eligibility remains in force until you are 65 years old. Upon reaching age 65, Tricare ends, and you become eligible for Tricare for Life and Medicare.

Tricare After Leaving the Service

After you retire, but prior to your 65th birthday (or Medicare eligibility), you remain eligible for regular Tricare just like you had on active duty.

These programs are: 

  1. Tricare Prime: A health maintenance organization-type managed care program for which retirees are required to pay an annual enrollment fee. Enrollees are assigned a primary care manager, who determines the most appropriate, available source of care - either a military treatment facility or a civilian network provider. Enrollees pay little or no co-payment, and usually are not required to file claims for their care.
  2.  Tricare Select: A fee for service option that requires an annual deductible and cost shares after the deductible has been reached. Under Tricare Select you may be responsible for filing your own claim. 

You may have to switch between your current program and another depending on availability of Tricare at your new home after you leave the service. 

Dental Care After Retirement

Once you retire, you lose eligibility to Tricare dental.

Retirees and their dependents can get dental care using the Office of Personnel Management’s Federal Employees Dental and Vision Insurance Program (FEDVIP).

FEDVIP is the same dental program used by Federal employees and retirees and offers  a choice between multiple dental insurance companies.

Tricare For Life

If you or a family member become entitled to Medicare Part A, whether due to a disability or when you turn 65, you are eligible for Tricare For Life (TFL). There are no TFL enrollment fees, but you are required to pay Medicare Part B premiums. When using TFL, Tricare is the second payer after Medicare in most cases. Get more information about TFL.

Tricare Pharmacy

When you reach age 65 (or otherwise become eligible for Medicare) you must enroll in Medicare as described above. Most people over 65 also sign up for Medicare Part D, which is the Medicare pharmacy benefit along with Part B, the medical insurance benefit.

With Tricare pharmacy eligibility it may not be in your best financial interest to purchase Medicare Part D. If you have Tricare, you don’t need to join a Medicare Prescription Drug Plan. However, if you do, your Medicare drug plan pays first, and Tricare pays second.

When you become eligible for Medicare Part D:

  • You'll receive a letter in the mail. 
  • It will explain how your Tricare prescription drug plan works with Medicare Part D.  

For most Tricare beneficiaries, there is almost NO advantage to enrolling in a Medicare prescription drug plan. Before deciding whether or not to enroll in a Medicare prescription drug plan, you should compare it with your Tricare prescription drug plan. Be sure to compare:

  • Monthly premiums
  • Deductibles
  • Co-pays
  • Drug coverage

If you do decide to enroll in a Medicare prescription drug plan:

  • Tricare will pay second after Medicare
  • You can enroll during your Initial Enrollment Period or the Open Enrollment Period each year 
  • The Open Enrollment Period is mid- October - early December each year, with prescription drug coverage beginning the next January 1st

See our Medicare Program Overview page for details.

Survivors

If a sponsor dies after retiring from active duty (either regular or a medical retirement), surviving family members remain eligible for Tricare with the same health plan options and costs they had before their sponsor passed away.

Surviving spouses remain eligible for Tricare unless they remarry and children remain eligible until they age out or lose eligibility for Tricare for other reasons.

Contact your Tricare regional contractor for assistance.

Supplemental Health Insurance for Retirees

One short stay in the hospital could offset the cost of several years of supplemental health insurance. Even though you are covered by Tricare, a supplemental insurance policy is a good idea for retirees. Here's why:

  • Tricare does not cover all costs.
  • Tricare has a yearly deductible to be paid.
  • Tricare has a yearly cap on non-covered expenses; the cap is extremely high, and you are responsible for the cost of non-covered items up to that amount. 

If you are covered by health insurance with your new employer, you may use Tricare as your supplemental insurance for that policy. Check with your Tricare advisor concerning your particular circumstances. 

Keep Up with Changes to Tricare and Your Other Benefits

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