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Can I Add My Spouse to My Medicare Plan?

By Tyler Dalton, PharmD, Licensed Medicare Agent Published

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Updated for 2026. Unlike employer health insurance, you cannot add your spouse to your Medicare plan. Medicare is individual coverage: each person enrolls separately. However, your work history CAN help your spouse qualify for premium-free Part A, and there are important enrollment strategies for couples. Here’s everything you need to know.

Why You Can’t Add a Spouse to Medicare

If you’ve had employer health insurance your entire career, you’re used to adding family members to your plan. Medicare doesn’t work that way. Each person is an individual beneficiary with their own Medicare number, their own enrollment, and their own coverage. There is no “family plan” in Medicare.

This means each spouse needs their own: Part A and Part B enrollment, Part D drug plan or Medicare Advantage plan, and Medigap supplement (if choosing Original Medicare).

How Your Work History Helps Your Spouse

Premium-Free Part A Through a Spouse’s Work Record

Even though you can’t add your spouse to your plan, your work history can help them financially. To get premium-free Part A, you need 40 quarters (10 years) of Medicare tax-paying employment. If your spouse didn’t work enough quarters on their own, they can qualify based on YOUR work record if:

  • You’re currently married and your spouse is 65+ (you must also be 62+)
  • You were married for 10+ years and are now divorced (ex-spouse must be 62+)
  • You’re a surviving spouse (widow/widower, age 65+)

Without qualifying work history, Part A premiums can be up to $565/month in 2026. This spousal benefit saves thousands per year.

What Your Spouse Still Pays

Even with premium-free Part A through your work record, your spouse still pays independently for: Part B premium ($202.90/month in 2026), Part D drug coverage, Medigap or Medicare Advantage plan, and all deductibles and coinsurance.

Medicare Enrollment Strategies for Couples

When Both Spouses Turn 65 at Different Times

This is the most common scenario and requires careful planning:

  • Each spouse enrolls during their own 7-month Initial Enrollment Period around their 65th birthday
  • If the younger spouse has employer coverage, the older spouse may be able to stay on that plan temporarily
  • When both are on Medicare, each needs their own plan selections

When One Spouse Is Under 65

If you’re 65 and your spouse is under 65: your spouse does NOT qualify for Medicare (unless they have a disability). Options for the younger spouse include employer coverage, ACA Marketplace plan (subsidies may apply), COBRA (up to 18-36 months), or spousal coverage through your former employer (if available as retiree benefit).

When One Spouse Still Works

If either spouse works for an employer with 20+ employees and has group health insurance that covers both spouses, the covered spouse can delay Part B without penalty. This applies whether it’s the Medicare-eligible spouse’s own employer or their spouse’s employer. When the working spouse retires, both get a Special Enrollment Period.

Can Couples Share a Medicare Plan?

No. But couples should coordinate their coverage decisions:

  • Both don’t need the same plan type. One spouse might benefit from Medigap while the other is better suited for Medicare Advantage.
  • Coordinate drug coverage. If one spouse takes expensive medications and the other doesn’t, they may need very different Part D plans.
  • Consider household budget. Two Medigap premiums are significant ($240-$400/month combined). If budget is tight, a mix of Medigap for the spouse with more health concerns and MA for the healthier spouse may make sense.
  • Both should review plans annually. During AEP (October 15, December 7), review both plans to ensure optimal coverage.

Special Situations for Married Couples

Divorce and Medicare

If you divorce after 10+ years of marriage, you can still qualify for premium-free Part A based on your ex-spouse’s work record, provided: the marriage lasted 10+ years, you’re currently unmarried, and your ex-spouse is entitled to Social Security benefits. You don’t need your ex-spouse’s permission.

Death of a Spouse

If your spouse passes away: you can qualify for premium-free Part A based on their work record as a surviving spouse at 65+. If you were on your spouse’s employer coverage, you’ll have a Special Enrollment Period for Medicare. Their Medicare plan cannot be transferred to you. If you had a joint household budget for Medicare premiums, contact us to review your individual coverage options. IRMAA may also change: death of a spouse is a qualifying life-changing event for an appeal.

Late Marriage

If you marry after both spouses are already on Medicare, nothing changes about your individual Medicare coverage. However, your combined household income could affect IRMAA calculations for both spouses in future years.

Frequently Asked Questions

My spouse is 60 and I’m turning 65. Can they get Medicare through me?

No. Your spouse must be 65 (or qualify through disability) to get Medicare, regardless of your age. Until they turn 65, they’ll need coverage through an employer, the ACA Marketplace, or COBRA. Once they turn 65, they can use your work history to qualify for premium-free Part A.

We’re both on my employer plan. When I retire, what happens to my spouse’s coverage?

When you retire: if your spouse is 65+, they get a Special Enrollment Period for Medicare. If your spouse is under 65, they may be eligible for COBRA (18 months) or can enroll in an ACA Marketplace plan. Plan this transition carefully: don’t let your spouse go without coverage.

Can my spouse use my Medicare to see a doctor?

Absolutely not. Medicare is individual coverage tied to your Social Security number. Using someone else’s Medicare is fraud and carries serious legal penalties. Each person must have their own Medicare enrollment.

Do married couples pay less for Medicare?

There is no marriage discount for Medicare premiums. Each spouse pays the standard Part B premium. However, IRMAA thresholds are higher for married couples filing jointly ($218,000 vs. $109,000 for singles), which can help higher-income couples avoid surcharges.

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Talk through your options with Tyler Dalton, PharmD, Licensed Medicare Agent. Consultations are free, and you keep the final say on every decision.