
Medicare Part D 2027: New $2,400 Cap, Costs & Enrollment
If you take prescription drugs, Medicare Part D 2027 is the most important coverage change on your calendar this year. Starting January 1, 2027, the annual out-of-pocket maximum that protects you from runaway drug costs is projected to rise to $2,400, and a wave of new federal rules will reshape premiums, deductibles, and how plans are marketed to you. Here is what is actually changing, what it will likely cost, and exactly when to act so you do not get caught in a plan that no longer fits.
I am Margaret Collins, and I have spent years helping seniors read the fine print that insurance companies hope they will skip. The 2027 rules were finalized by CMS in April 2026 and take legal effect June 1, 2026, with most benefits applying to coverage that begins January 1, 2027. Let us walk through it together.
Table of Contents
- The new $2,400 out-of-pocket cap explained
- Projected 2027 Part D costs at a glance
- What else is changing in 2027
- Key dates: when 2027 plans appear and when to enroll
- 5 steps to prepare before October 15
- Frequently asked questions
The New $2,400 Out-of-Pocket Cap, Explained
The single most valuable feature of Medicare Part D 2027 is the hard annual cap on what you pay out of pocket for covered prescriptions. This protection was created by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 and phased in over several years: the old “donut hole” coverage gap was eliminated entirely in 2025, the cap was set at $2,000 in 2025, $2,100 in 2026, and is projected to reach roughly $2,400 in 2027 as it indexes to drug-cost inflation.
Here is why this matters. Once your out-of-pocket spending on covered drugs reaches that cap, you pay $0 for those medications for the rest of the calendar year. For a senior on a high-cost specialty drug for cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, or multiple sclerosis, that can mean the difference between $10,000 in annual drug bills and a predictable ceiling under $2,500. The projected $700 deductible for 2027 counts toward that maximum, so nothing you spend is wasted.
You can also spread that cost over the year. The Medicare Prescription Payment Plan, which began in 2025, lets you pay your out-of-pocket drug costs in smooth monthly installments instead of a painful lump sum at the pharmacy counter in January. It is free to join, and it continues in 2027.
Projected 2027 Part D Costs at a Glance
CMS confirms final dollar figures each fall, so treat the 2027 column below as the latest projections based on the finalized rule and the program’s published trajectory. The 2025 and 2026 figures are confirmed.
| Feature | 2025 (actual) | 2026 (actual) | 2027 (projected) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Out-of-pocket maximum | $2,000 | $2,100 | ~$2,400 |
| Maximum deductible | $590 | $615 | ~$700 |
| Coverage gap (“donut hole”) | Eliminated | Eliminated | Eliminated |
| Insulin copay (per month) | $35 | $35 | $35 |
| ACIP adult vaccines | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Base beneficiary premium | ~$36/mo | varies by plan | wider plan-to-plan spread |
Note that insulin remains capped at $35 per month per covered product, and all adult vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) — including shingles (Shingrix), RSV, and pneumococcal vaccines — are permanently free under Part D with no deductible. These are quiet but substantial savings most seniors never claim.
What Else Is Changing in 2027
Wider premium differences between plans
Because plans now carry more of the cost in the catastrophic phase, CMS expects a wider spread in monthly premiums for 2027 — especially for plans that cover a larger share of expensive medications. The plan that was cheapest for you in 2026 may not be in 2027. This is precisely why comparison shopping every fall is non-negotiable.
Relaxed marketing rules — stay alert
The 2027 final rule loosened some marketing restrictions on Medicare Advantage and Part D plans. In plain terms, you may see more aggressive advertising and more sales calls during open enrollment. Protect yourself: a legitimate plan will never pressure you to decide on the spot, and you can always verify a plan independently on Medicare.gov.
More negotiated drug prices arrive
The Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program continues to expand. The first 10 negotiated prices took effect January 1, 2026, and additional drugs are being added in later years, which should lower costs on several widely used medications over time.
Key Dates: When 2027 Plans Appear and When to Enroll
The most common question I hear is “when will 2027 Part D plans be available?” The answer is fall 2026. Specific 2027 plan premiums, formularies, and networks are not finalized until then. Mark these dates:
- By September 30, 2026 — Your current plan must mail your Annual Notice of Change (ANOC), listing every 2027 change to premium, deductible, copays, drug formulary, and pharmacy network. Read it cover to cover.
- October 1, 2026 — 2027 marketing and plan details become public; the Medicare Plan Finder updates with 2027 options.
- October 15 – December 7, 2026 — Annual Election Period (AEP). This is when you join, switch, or drop a Part D plan for 2027.
- January 1, 2027 — New coverage begins.
- January 1 – March 31, 2027 — Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment, a limited window to change MA plans.
5 Steps to Prepare Before October 15
- Make a current drug list. Write down every medication, dose, and frequency. You will paste this into the Medicare Plan Finder to compare true total costs, not just premiums.
- Read your ANOC the day it arrives. Look specifically for whether your drugs are still on the formulary and whether they moved to a higher cost tier.
- Check whether you qualify for Extra Help. The Low-Income Subsidy can erase most Part D costs, and the income limits are more generous than most seniors assume.
- Compare on total annual cost. The lowest-premium plan is frequently the most expensive once deductibles and tiers are counted.
- Confirm your pharmacy is preferred. Using an in-network preferred pharmacy can cut your copays substantially.
Frequently Asked Questions
When can I enroll in a 2027 Medicare Part D plan?
The Annual Election Period runs October 15 through December 7, 2026, for coverage that starts January 1, 2027. Plan details become public around October 1, 2026. If you miss this window without a Special Enrollment Period, you generally must wait a full year.
What is the Part D out-of-pocket cap for 2027?
It is projected at roughly $2,400. Once your out-of-pocket spending on covered drugs reaches the cap, you pay nothing more for those drugs for the rest of the year. CMS confirms the exact figure in fall 2026.
Do I have to switch plans for 2027?
No, your plan auto-renews if you do nothing. But because premiums and formularies are shifting widely in 2027, staying put without checking your ANOC can quietly cost you hundreds of dollars. Always compare.
Are vaccines and insulin still capped in 2027?
Yes. ACIP-recommended adult vaccines remain free with no deductible, and covered insulin products are capped at $35 per month. These protections are permanent features of Part D.
Related Articles You May Find Helpful
- Medicare 2026: The Complete Guide for Seniors
- Medicare Part D’s $2,100 Drug Cap in 2026: How It Works
- Medicare Prescription Payment Plan 2026: Spread Out Drug Costs
- Medicare Extra Help 2026: Save Up to $5,900 on Drug Costs
- Medicare Advantage 2027 Open Enrollment: 8 Steps to Choose
Sources
- Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services — Contract Year 2027 Medicare Advantage and Part D Final Rule (April 2026)
- Medicare.gov — Yearly deductible for drug plans and the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan
- Medicare Rights Center — Final 2027 Medicare Advantage and Part D Rule analysis
This article is for educational purposes and is not medical or insurance advice. Confirm 2027 figures on Medicare.gov when plans are published in fall 2026, and review our Medical Disclaimer and Editorial Guidelines.