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Like a standard PPO, you can see any Medicare-approved doctor or specialist without a referral. You'll save money using in-network providers, but you're not locked out of seeing others if needed. Your drug coverage travels with you — it applies at any in-network pharmacy, and many plans include mail-order options for 90-day supplies of maintenance medications.
When comparing MAPD PPO plans, look beyond the premium. Two plans with similar premiums might have dramatically different drug formularies. If you take expensive brand-name medications, check where they fall in the plan's tier structure before enrolling — that single difference can mean hundreds or thousands of dollars per year.
Also compare the maximum out-of-pocket limit for in-network care. MAPD PPOs can range from under $3,000 to over $7,500 for the in-network cap alone, with separate higher limits for out-of-network care. In Ohio and Pennsylvania, the range of MAPD PPO options from carriers like Humana, UHC, Aetna, UPMC, and Highmark can be wide — taking time to compare plans at your zip code is worth it.
When comparing MAPD PPO plans, check whether your current pharmacy is in the preferred network — not just any network. Many plans have a two-tier pharmacy structure where preferred pharmacies charge lower copays than standard in-network pharmacies. Using a preferred pharmacy for maintenance medications can make a meaningful difference in your annual drug costs.



Peter Abilla is a licensed Medicare agent. He can walk you through this plan's costs, coverage, and whether your doctors are in-network.
