
Varicose Veins in Seniors 2026: Causes & Treatment
Those rope-like, bluish veins bulging on the calves are easy to dismiss as a cosmetic nuisance, but varicose veins in seniors are often the visible tip of chronic venous insufficiency—a real circulatory condition that can lead to swelling, skin damage, and slow-healing leg ulcers if ignored. After decades of gravity pulling blood downward, the one-way valves inside leg veins weaken and leak, letting blood pool. As a senior health writer, I want you to know which symptoms are harmless, which are warning signs, and exactly when Medicare will help pay for treatment in 2026.
Table of Contents
- What Causes Varicose Veins in Seniors
- Symptoms vs. Red Flags
- Self-Care That Actually Works
- Medical Treatments in 2026
- Does Medicare Cover Vein Treatment?
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Causes Varicose Veins in Seniors
Healthy leg veins push blood uphill to the heart against gravity, helped by calf-muscle contractions and a series of tiny one-way valves. With age, vein walls lose elasticity and those valves stop sealing tightly. Blood refluxes backward and pools, stretching the vein until it twists and bulges—the classic varicose vein. This underlying valve failure is called chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), and it becomes more common every decade after 50.
Several factors stack the deck in later life: a family history of vein disease, female sex and past pregnancies, prolonged standing or sitting, obesity, and previous blood clots that scarred the deep veins. Varicose veins in seniors are therefore rarely “just from getting older”—they reflect a measurable, treatable problem with venous return.
Symptoms vs. Red Flags
Many people have visible veins with few symptoms. Others develop aching, heaviness, throbbing, night cramps, restless legs, or swelling that worsens through the day and eases with elevation. The pattern—better in the morning, worse after standing—is the fingerprint of venous disease rather than arthritis or nerve pain.
| Usually harmless | See a doctor | Urgent / same day |
|---|---|---|
| Visible veins, mild aching | Ankle swelling, skin darkening | Sudden one-leg swelling + pain (possible clot) |
| Heaviness after standing | Itchy, dry, hardened skin (gaiter area) | Bleeding from a vein |
| Occasional night cramp | An open sore near the ankle that won’t heal | Red, hot, tender leg with fever |
The middle and right columns matter most. Brown skin staining and a non-healing inner-ankle ulcer signal advanced CVI, while sudden painful swelling in one leg can mean deep vein thrombosis, a medical emergency. When in doubt about a hot, swollen, tender leg, treat it as urgent—the overlap with cellulitis and leg ulcers is real.
How Doctors Diagnose Vein Disease
The cornerstone test is a venous duplex ultrasound—a painless bedside scan that watches blood flow in real time. The technician compresses the veins and has you stand or perform a calf squeeze while measuring how long blood flows backward. Reflux lasting more than about half a second confirms valve failure and pinpoints exactly which veins are leaking. This map guides treatment and is also the document Medicare wants to see before approving ablation.
Your doctor will also check the pulses and circulation in your feet. That matters because compression and some vein procedures are unsafe if you have significant peripheral artery disease, where the problem is too little arterial blood reaching the leg rather than too much venous blood pooling. Sorting out arterial from venous disease early prevents the wrong treatment—another reason a swollen, discolored, or ulcerated leg should be evaluated rather than self-treated.
Self-Care That Actually Works
Conservative care is the foundation, and Medicare actually requires a documented trial of it before approving procedures. The pillars are simple but genuinely effective.
Graduated compression stockings
Medical-grade graduated compression (commonly 20–30 mmHg) squeezes hardest at the ankle and less up the calf, helping the veins push blood upward. Worn from morning until bedtime, they reduce aching and swelling and slow disease progression. Our guide to Medicare and compression stockings explains the narrow rules for getting them covered.
Movement, elevation, and weight
The calf muscle is your “second heart.” Walking, ankle pumps, and avoiding long unbroken sitting or standing all drive venous return. Elevating the legs above heart level for 15 minutes a few times a day drains pooled blood, and losing excess weight lowers the pressure load on leg veins.
Medical Treatments in 2026
When symptoms persist despite conservative care, modern vein treatment is minimally invasive, done in the office under local anesthesia, with most people walking out the same day.
| Procedure | How it works | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Endovenous laser (EVLA) | Laser fiber heats and seals the bad vein | Office-based, quick recovery |
| Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) | Radio-wave heat closes the vein | Office-based, similar results |
| Ambulatory phlebectomy | Tiny nicks remove surface bulging veins | Often paired with ablation |
| Sclerotherapy | Injection irritates and closes the vein | Best for smaller/spider veins |
After the diseased vein is closed, blood simply reroutes through healthy deep veins, and circulation usually improves. Age alone is not a barrier to these procedures; overall health and the severity of symptoms matter far more.
Does Medicare Cover Vein Treatment?
Yes—Medicare Part B covers varicose vein treatment when it is medically necessary, but not when it is cosmetic. To approve ablation, Medicare contractors typically require documentation of symptoms (pain, swelling, skin changes, or ulcer), evidence of venous reflux on a duplex ultrasound, and a failed trial of conservative therapy—usually about three months of medical-grade compression. Spider-vein sclerotherapy done purely for appearance is not covered.
Expect the standard Part B math: after the annual deductible, you pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount, which a Medigap plan can absorb. Many payers also require prior authorization, so let the vein clinic submit the ultrasound and compression records first. Medicare Advantage plans must cover at least what Original Medicare does, but follow their network and prior-authorization rules.
One practical tip: keep copies of everything. Ask the clinic for your ultrasound report, a note documenting your three-month compression trial, and photos of any skin changes or ulcers. When a denial happens, it is almost always because that paper trail was incomplete—not because the treatment was truly cosmetic. A well-documented file turns a likely “no” into a routine approval.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are varicose veins dangerous for seniors?
Most are not dangerous, but untreated chronic venous insufficiency can progress to skin breakdown and venous leg ulcers, and a sudden painful, swollen single leg can signal a blood clot. Persistent swelling, skin darkening, or a non-healing ankle sore deserve prompt evaluation.
Do compression stockings really help?
Yes. Graduated compression reliably reduces aching and swelling and slows progression, and it is the first-line treatment doctors and Medicare expect you to try. The key is medical-grade pressure, correct fit, and wearing them all day, every day.
Is vein surgery painful or risky at my age?
Modern ablation is done under local anesthesia with minimal discomfort and a fast return to walking. Complications are uncommon. Your overall health, not your birthday, determines whether you are a good candidate, so discuss your medications and history with the vein specialist.
Can I prevent new varicose veins?
You cannot change genetics or age, but staying active, keeping a healthy weight, elevating your legs, and wearing compression during long travel or standing all reduce venous pressure and can slow new veins from forming.
Related Articles You May Find Helpful
- Senior Health Conditions Guide 2026
- Does Medicare Cover Compression Stockings in 2026?
- Cellulitis & Leg Ulcers in Seniors 2026
- High Blood Pressure in Seniors 2026
- Fall Prevention for Seniors 2026
Sources
- CMS Local Coverage Determination — Treatment of Varicose Veins of the Lower Extremities
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NIH) — Varicose Veins & Chronic Venous Insufficiency
- Medicare.gov — Part B medically necessary services
This article is educational and not a substitute for medical advice. Discuss leg symptoms and treatment with your physician. See our Medical Disclaimer.