Medicare Part B premiums are set to rise in 2026, affecting monthly costs for millions of beneficiaries.
According to a press release, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has updated premiums, deductions, and coinsurance for Part A, Part B, and Part D of Medicare. In the announcement, the standard monthly Part B premium was shown to increase to $202.90 for 2026, up $17.90 from 2025. The 9.7% adjustment marks the program’s second-largest increase on record, as Newsweek reports. The highest jump came in 2022, when it went up to $21.60. CMS said the latest change reflects anticipated shifts in medical costs and expected growth in service use, consistent with historical trends.
According to the press release, Part B covers services such as doctor’s visits, outpatient hospital care, preventive care, lab tests, durable medical equipment, and certain home health services. Enrollment is optional, but most Medicare-eligible individuals participate to fill coverage gaps not included in Part A. Beneficiaries pay a monthly premium and share certain costs through deductibles and coinsurance.
The premium increase comes as households are navigating rising healthcare and living expenses. Because Part B costs are typically deducted from Social Security benefits, retirees’ monthly income will be directly affected. Social Security payments are set to rise 2.8% in 2026 through the annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), according to Newsweek. However, after accounting for the higher Part B premium, the effective increase for the average beneficiary receiving $2,008 per month drops to about 1.9%. Those receiving $1,000 per month will see an effective increase of roughly 1%.
The outlet notes that some beneficiaries are protected by the “hold harmless provision,” which prevents Social Security checks from decreasing if the premium hike exceeds their COLA. This generally applies to individuals receiving less than $640 per month, whose benefits will remain steady.
Independent analyst Mary Johnson noted that the increase may shape perceptions of the COLA, as a portion of the annual adjustment will be absorbed by higher healthcare costs.
“The public is likely to perceive this Part B increase as taking a significant chunk of or even most of their COLA,” she said, per Newsweek. “In other words, another continuation in relentless cost increases battering consumer finances.”
The new premium structure will take effect in January 2026, giving beneficiaries time to plan for the higher monthly payments and adjust their budgets accordingly.

