Decision Prep
The General Enrollment Period: What It Fixes and What It Does Not
The General Enrollment Period is a real safety net for missed Part B enrollment. It is not the same as Open Enrollment, and it may not erase the penalty for waiting.
The General Enrollment Period is a real safety net for missed Part B enrollment. It is not the same as Open Enrollment, and it may not erase the penalty for waiting.
The General Enrollment Period (GEP) runs January 1 to March 31 each year. It exists for people who missed their Initial Enrollment Period and did not qualify for a Special Enrollment Period. During the GEP, you can enroll in Part A or Part B. But the GEP does not erase a Part B late enrollment penalty for the years you went without coverage, and it does not undo a Part D late enrollment penalty either. It is also not the same as the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 to December 7), which is for changing Medicare Advantage and Part D plans. If you missed Part B and you do not have a Special Enrollment Period, the GEP is your path — and the sooner you use it, the smaller the penalty grows.
Like a delayed connecting flight — you eventually get there, but the layover costs you something the original flight would not have.
The short answer
The General Enrollment Period runs January 1 to March 31 each year. (Medicare.gov — When Can I Sign Up)
It is for people who:
- Did not enroll in Part A or Part B during their Initial Enrollment Period, and
- Do not qualify for a Special Enrollment Period (active employer coverage, etc.).
What the GEP does:
- Lets you enroll in Part A or Part B.
- Coverage generally starts the first of the month after enrollment under current rules — verify with Social Security.
What the GEP does not do:
- It does not erase a Part B late enrollment penalty for the years you delayed.
- It does not erase a Part D late enrollment penalty if you also went without creditable drug coverage.
- It does not give you a Medigap open enrollment window. Your Medigap rights depend on your enrollment timing and state rules.
- It is not the same as the Annual Enrollment Period — those are different windows for different purposes.
How this applies to you
If you missed Part B and have no Special Enrollment Period: The GEP is your path. Contact Social Security in January if not earlier. Coverage start date and penalty amount depend on enrollment date.
If you missed Part B but think you might have a Special Enrollment Period: Verify with Social Security first. If you have active employer coverage (yours or your spouse’s), you may still be in your SEP. See The 8-Month Part B Special Enrollment Period.
If you have Part A but not Part B and never qualified for the SEP: The GEP is when you can add Part B. You may also be paying a Part B penalty already that will recalculate from your enrollment date.
If you missed Part D too: Adding Part D during the GEP is part of the same conversation. The Part D late enrollment penalty is separate from the Part B penalty and is calculated by the number of full months you went without creditable drug coverage. (Medicare.gov — Part D Late Enrollment Penalty)
GEP vs. Annual Enrollment Period — they are not the same
This is one of the most common Medicare timing confusions. They are different windows for different purposes.
| Question | General Enrollment Period | Annual Enrollment Period |
|---|---|---|
| When? | January 1 — March 31 | October 15 — December 7 |
| Who is it for? | People who missed Initial / Special Enrollment for Part A or Part B | Anyone already enrolled in Medicare |
| What can you do? | Enroll in Part A or Part B for the first time | Change Medicare Advantage; change Part D; switch between Original Medicare and MA |
| Does it fix late enrollment penalties? | No — penalties still apply | Not applicable — you are already enrolled |
| When does coverage / change start? | First of the month after enrollment (verify current rule) | January 1 of the following year |
If you missed Part B enrollment, the General Enrollment Period is your path — not the Annual Enrollment Period. See Why Open Enrollment Does Not Fix Every Medicare Mistake.
How the Part B late enrollment penalty works
The penalty is 10% of the Part B premium for each full 12-month period you could have had Part B but did not. (Medicare.gov — Part B Late Enrollment Penalty)
- You pay the increased premium for as long as you have Part B.
- Months in an Initial Enrollment Period that you skipped count toward the penalty period.
- Months when you had a Special Enrollment Period that you used appropriately do not count toward the penalty.
The penalty calculation is permanent. Enrolling sooner means a smaller permanent penalty than enrolling later.
What people often get wrong
- ”I’ll wait until next year’s Open Enrollment to fix this.” The Annual Enrollment Period in October–December does not fix a missed Part B. The General Enrollment Period in January–March does.
- ”The penalty will reset eventually.” It does not. The Part B late enrollment penalty is added to your premium each month for as long as you have Part B.
- ”Once I’m enrolled, I can buy Medigap right away.” Your Medigap open enrollment window is tied to your initial Part B enrollment date and is six months long. If you enroll in Part B during the GEP, your Medigap open enrollment window opens at that point — but state rules and underwriting may apply if you are past your initial window. Verify with your state SHIP.
- ”The GEP fixes everything.” It enrolls you in Part B. It does not undo the penalty, and it does not solve every coordination question.
What to check before the GEP
- Confirm you do not qualify for a Special Enrollment Period. Active employer coverage, certain employer-related life events, and other situations can trigger an SEP. Confirm with Social Security.
- Estimate your penalty. Count the full 12-month periods you have gone without Part B since your Initial Enrollment Period. The Social Security office can give you the official calculation.
- Plan for coverage start. Coverage from a GEP enrollment generally starts the first of the month after enrollment under current rules. Verify the current rule with Social Security before assuming a specific start date.
- Consider Part D at the same time. If you also do not have Part D and did not have creditable drug coverage, the GEP enrollment in Part B opens the door to a Part D enrollment window. The Part D penalty calculation is separate.
A simple timing prompt
”Am I trying to enroll for the first time, or am I trying to change a plan?”
If you are enrolling for the first time and missed earlier windows: General Enrollment Period.
If you are changing a Medicare Advantage or Part D plan: Annual Enrollment Period.
You eventually get there. The layover costs something. Use the next available window — the cost of waiting longer is added to the cost you already owe.
This is a piece of a bigger picture
This article is part of Enrollment & Timing.