Learn · Ads, Calls & Free Help
Medicare ads are designed to get your attention — and they're good at it. These articles help you evaluate what's actually being offered before a benefit influences a decision that will follow you for years.
The short answer
Extra benefits like flex cards, grocery allowances, OTC cards, gym memberships, and dental coverage are real — but they are add-ons to a plan, not the plan itself. Understanding what a benefit actually covers, how it's delivered, and what plan it's attached to is the work that happens before you call the number on the screen.
Read in order, or jump to what you need.
"Flex card" sounds broad enough to mean almost anything. In practice, a flex card benefit is usually limited, plan-specific, and not a reason to choose a plan.
Read the article →Medicare grocery card ads sound bigger than they usually are. Before the benefit influences your decision, understand what it actually covers and how it's delivered.
Read the article →Gym memberships and wellness benefits are some of the most likable Medicare extras. They are easy to say yes to — but they are still extras, not the foundation of a coverage decision.
Read the article →An OTC card in a Medicare Advantage plan can be useful. But it is still an extra benefit, not the foundation of a coverage decision.
Read the article →Transportation benefits can point to a real barrier in healthcare. For some people, that help can be genuinely valuable — but it is still an extra, not the primary reason to choose a plan.
Read the article →When a Medicare ad suggests help with utilities or household living costs, it gets attention fast. But the benefit is usually narrower than the ad implies.
Read the article →Dental, vision, and hearing benefits in Medicare Advantage plans can be genuinely useful. The problem is when they become the reason to choose a plan before the core coverage is evaluated.
Read the article →"Free Medicare help" does not always mean the same thing. Before relying on it, ask who is providing it, how they are paid, and what happens to your information.
Read the article →Before entering your phone number into a Medicare website or ad landing page, understand what happens next — and what to look for before you submit.
Read the article →Some Medicare education is also marketing. That does not make it useless. It does mean you should know what kind of conversation you are in.
Read the article →A Medicare benefit claim may be real and still not apply to you the way it sounds. Here is what to verify before a benefit number affects a plan decision.
Read the article →Extra benefits can sound simple. The rules often matter more than the headline. This is the umbrella view for all extra benefit types.
Read the article →A title can tell you something. It does not tell you everything. Before relying on any Medicare advisor, ask what the title means and how they are compensated.
Read the article →The goal is not to avoid every agent. The goal is to understand the conversation you are having — and to leave it clearer, not rushed.
Read the article →Not every Medicare ad is a scam. But some calls, texts, and requests should make you stop. Learn the warning signs and what to do.
Read the article →Fern can help you organize what matters, what is unclear, and what still needs to be verified before you call, compare, renew, or decide.