Does Medicare Cover Chiropractic in 2026? What Seniors Must Know
If back pain, neck stiffness, or spinal problems are affecting your daily life, you may be wondering: does Medicare cover chiropractic care in 2026? The answer is yes — but with important limitations. Understanding exactly what Medicare chiropractic coverage 2026 includes can help you plan your care and avoid unexpected bills. As a senior health expert, I want to walk you through everything you need to know before your next chiropractic visit.
What Medicare Chiropractic Coverage 2026 Actually Covers
Medicare Part B covers one specific chiropractic service: manual manipulation of the spine to correct a subluxation — a condition where spinal joints fail to move properly. That is the full scope of Original Medicare chiropractic benefits. According to Medicare.gov, covered chiropractic care under Part B in 2026 includes spinal manipulation by a Medicare-enrolled licensed chiropractor (DC), provided the condition is diagnosed as a spinal subluxation. Medicare covers 80% of the Medicare-approved amount after you meet your Part B deductible of $283 in 2026.
What Is NOT Covered Under Medicare Chiropractic Benefits
This is where many seniors are caught off guard. Medicare has a notably narrow definition of covered chiropractic services. The following are not covered under Original Medicare, even when your chiropractor orders them:
| Service | Covered by Original Medicare? |
|---|---|
| Spinal manipulation (subluxation correction) | Yes — 80% after $283 deductible |
| X-rays ordered by chiropractor | No |
| Massage therapy | No |
| Acupuncture by chiropractor | No |
| Nutritional counseling | No |
| Ultrasound or electrical stimulation | No |
How Much Does Medicare Chiropractic Cost in 2026?
In 2026, the Medicare-approved amount for a chiropractic spinal manipulation is approximately $25 to $40 per adjustment. After meeting the $283 Part B deductible, you pay 20% of that approved amount — roughly $5 to $8 per visit. A senior with Medigap Plan G pays nothing after the deductible, since Plan G covers the 20% coinsurance. Without any supplemental plan, a patient attending chiropractic twice monthly would pay roughly $120 to $192 per year in coinsurance — on top of the deductible.
Medicare Advantage Plans Offer More Chiropractic Coverage
If you have a Medicare Advantage (Part C) plan, your chiropractic benefits may be significantly expanded beyond what Original Medicare offers. Under 2026 CMS rules, all Medicare Advantage plans must cover spinal manipulation, and many plans go further by including additional visits, X-rays, and reduced copays of $10 to $30 per visit rather than the standard 20% coinsurance. Some plans offer 20 to 40 covered chiropractic visits per year. Always review your specific plan’s Evidence of Coverage for the precise benefit details.
The Chiropractic Medicare Modernization Act of 2025
Congress has been working to expand Medicare chiropractic coverage. The Chiropractic Medicare Coverage Modernization Act of 2025 (S.106/H.R. 538) would broaden Medicare coverage to include the full scope of chiropractic services — examinations, diagnostic imaging, therapeutic modalities, and management of musculoskeletal conditions beyond just the spine. According to Congress.gov, this legislation has bipartisan support. As of May 2026, it has not been signed into law, but it signals the direction Medicare chiropractic coverage is heading.
Active vs. Maintenance Chiropractic Care: A Critical Medicare Distinction
One of the most important things seniors need to understand about Medicare chiropractic coverage 2026 is the distinction between active treatment and maintenance care. Medicare only covers chiropractic visits that are medically necessary and actively improving your condition. Maintenance visits — where the goal is simply to prevent your condition from worsening rather than actively improving it — are generally not covered. If your chiropractor believes a visit may be for maintenance rather than active treatment, they are legally required to give you an Advance Beneficiary Notice (ABN) before the visit. The ABN gives you the choice to receive the service and pay privately if Medicare denies coverage.
How to Find a Medicare-Enrolled Chiropractor
Before scheduling your first appointment, confirm that your chiropractor is enrolled in Medicare. Not all chiropractors accept Medicare. Here is how to verify:
- Visit Medicare.gov/care-compare and search for chiropractors in your zip code.
- Call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) and ask if a specific provider accepts Medicare.
- Ask the chiropractic office directly: “Are you a participating Medicare provider who accepts assignment?”
- Participating providers accept Medicare’s approved amount as payment in full. Non-participating providers can charge up to 115% of the Medicare rate.
When to Appeal a Medicare Chiropractic Denial
Medicare claim denials for chiropractic care are common and frequently overturned on appeal — particularly when the chiropractor has properly documented the subluxation diagnosis and treatment progress. If Medicare denies your chiropractic claim, you have the right to appeal through Medicare’s 5-level appeals process. Start by requesting a Redetermination from your Medicare Administrative Contractor within 120 days of the denial. Gather your chiropractor’s clinical notes documenting your diagnosis, functional limitations, and measurable improvement with each visit. The stronger the clinical documentation, the higher the odds of a successful appeal.
5 Expert Tips to Maximize Your Medicare Chiropractic Benefits
- Get a proper subluxation diagnosis first. Medicare requires clear documentation of spinal subluxation in your clinical records for every covered visit.
- Request an ABN before any non-covered service. If your chiropractor wants to order X-rays or provide massage, they must notify you in advance that Medicare won’t pay so you can decide whether to proceed.
- Consider Medigap Plan G or N. These plans cover your 20% coinsurance, making each covered adjustment essentially free after the annual deductible.
- Check your Medicare Advantage plan benefits. Many Part C plans cover far more than Original Medicare, including routine chiropractic visits with low copays.
- If denied, appeal promptly. You have 120 days from the denial date to file a Redetermination request. Document everything.
Sources
- Medicare.gov — Chiropractic Services Coverage
- Congress.gov — Chiropractic Medicare Coverage Modernization Act S.106
- AARP — 8 Changes Shaping Medicare Coverage in 2026