Which Medicare plans in Utah work best with University of Utah Health?

Providers
Last updated: 
April 10, 2026
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The short answer

Plans that include University of Utah Health in their provider networks are your best starting point. Regence BlueCross and some other carriers contract with U of U Health, but you should verify network status for your specific providers before enrolling.

The full explanation

University of Utah Health is a major academic medical center that handles a lot of complex, specialized care. It is also a separate health system from Intermountain Health, which means the two systems do not share insurance contracts. A plan that works well for an Intermountain patient may not cover your U of U doctors at all, or may cover them at a higher out-of-pocket cost.Regence BlueCross has historically included University of Utah Health providers in its networks and is often mentioned alongside U of U coverage in the Salt Lake area. Some national carriers like UHC and Humana may also include U of U providers, but this varies by specific plan and changes from year to year.If you receive specialty care at U of U Health, including cancer care, transplant services, or care from a subspecialist, this is not a question to guess on. Call the University of Utah Health billing department and ask which Medicare Advantage plans they currently accept. Then confirm the same thing directly with the insurance carrier. Network directories are sometimes out of date, and the stakes are high enough that it is worth a phone call.For Original Medicare beneficiaries with a Medigap supplement, University of Utah Health accepts Medicare patients the same way any Medicare-participating provider would, which removes the in-network concern entirely.

Related Medicare Resources

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In 

Utah

 specifically

University of Utah Health is a distinct system from Intermountain Health, and their insurance contracts differ. In Salt Lake County, Regence BlueCross is commonly associated with U of U Health network access. Utah residents who rely on U of U specialists should confirm current network participation directly with both the plan and the provider's office.

What this means for you

For you, this means if University of Utah Health is part of your care, verifying network participation before you enroll is essential, not optional.

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