If you later want to switch from Medicare Advantage to Original Medicare with a supplement, you may be denied coverage or charged higher premiums based on your health history, unless you qualify for a special guaranteed-issue right.
This is one of the most important trade-offs to understand before choosing Medicare Advantage. In most states, including Utah, Medigap (Medicare Supplement) insurers can use medical underwriting outside of certain protected windows. That means they can look at your health history, and they can say no or charge you more based on what they find. If you enroll in Medicare Advantage at 65 and later want to switch back, you generally won't have the same protections you had when you first became eligible. There are exceptions. If your plan leaves your area, or if you move out of the plan's service area, those situations can trigger guaranteed-issue rights that protect you. But health decline on its own is not one of them. This doesn't mean Medicare Advantage is the wrong choice. Many people are very happy with it for years. It just means you should think carefully about your long-term health outlook, not just your situation right now. Talking with a licensed agent about your specific circumstances can help you weigh that risk honestly.
For you, this means choosing Medicare Advantage isn't necessarily a permanent decision, but switching later may be harder than you expect, so it's worth thinking through before you enroll.
Our Commitment to Reliable Medicare Information
At Resting Sycamore Advisors, we work to provide accurate, current, and trustworthy information about Medicare Advantage, Medicare Part D, and Special Needs Plans.
To do that, we use data published by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which is the official source for Medicare plan and enrollment information.
Our Medicare plan pages and comparison tools are powered by CMS datasets, including:
When possible, we link to the original CMS resources so you can review the source material directly.
We follow the CMS release schedule and update our website as new data becomes available.
We load new plan year Landscape and PBP files before the Medicare Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 through December 7). We also monitor CMS.gov for updates or revisions and refresh our content when needed.
We update enrollment and performance data as CMS publishes revised files, which are typically released monthly or quarterly.
We routinely monitor CMS announcements for corrections, reissued files, or other changes and update our pages accordingly.
Each plan page includes a Last Accessed date so visitors can see when the source information was most recently reviewed.
CMS data can be difficult to read in raw form. To make it easier to use, we format and organize the data for clarity.
This includes:
All data values come from CMS. We do not change the underlying values beyond formatting, organization, and presentation.
We keep internal records of the CMS dataset versions used on our site.
If CMS issues corrected or revised files, we update our website to reflect the latest available version.
Please keep the following in mind:
For personalized Medicare assistance, please use these official resources: