Thompson Medicare Brokerage
Do I need a Medicare Broker?
Why Do I Need a Medicare Broker?
The honest answer is that you are not required to use a Medicare broker. You can research plans and enroll on your own. A good broker simply makes the process easier, helps you avoid expensive mistakes and remains available when you need help after enrollment.
The Honest Answer
No—you do not have to use a Medicare broker.
You can learn the Medicare enrollment rules, compare premiums, formularies, provider networks and benefits, and then enroll directly. For some people, that works perfectly well.
The real question is whether you want to handle all of that research alone and then be your own advocate when questions or coverage problems arise.
What Does a Medicare Broker Actually Do?
My job is not simply to show you a list of plans. I first need to understand your situation and then determine which available options deserve a closer look.
Checks Your Providers
I verify your doctors, specialists, hospitals and preferred health systems before recommending a Medicare Advantage plan.
Reviews Your Prescriptions
I compare formularies, drug tiers, preferred pharmacies, deductibles and estimated annual prescription costs.
Explains the Real Costs
We look beyond the monthly premium to consider copayments, coinsurance, deductibles and potential out-of-pocket exposure.
Compares Coverage Paths
I help you understand Original Medicare, Medigap, Medicare Advantage and Part D instead of assuming one path fits everyone.
Watches Enrollment Rules
I help identify your enrollment period, effective date and important deadlines so avoidable penalties or coverage gaps are less likely.
Provides Ongoing Support
My relationship with you does not end when the application is submitted. I remain available for questions and plan problems.
You can learn more about the help I provide on the Medicare broker services page .
More Carriers Can Mean More Choices
If you contact one insurance company directly, its representative can explain that company’s products. They generally cannot enroll you in a competing company’s plan—even when another company may better fit your doctors, prescriptions or budget.
As an independent Medicare broker, I contract with multiple insurance companies. That allows me to compare options from the companies I represent rather than limiting the conversation to one carrier.
- Different Medicare Advantage provider networks
- Different Part D formularies and pharmacy arrangements
- Different Medigap premiums and underwriting rules
- Different copayments and maximum out-of-pocket limits
- Different supplemental benefits and service areas
See the insurance companies currently included in my Medicare carrier portfolio .
Medicare Agent vs. Medicare Broker
The terms agent and broker are often used interchangeably in the Medicare industry. The more useful distinction is whether the person is captive or independent.
Captive or Carrier Representative
A captive representative generally offers plans from one insurance company. That person may know the company’s products well, but cannot provide a full comparison with competitors they do not represent.
This does not automatically make the representative dishonest. It simply means the available selection is limited.
Independent Agent or Broker
An independent licensed agent or broker can contract with multiple insurance companies and compare the plans they are authorized to offer in your area.
Independence creates more room for comparison, but you should still ask which carriers and plans the person represents.
For a deeper explanation, read Medicare Agent vs. Broker: What You Should Know .
Does Using a Medicare Broker Cost You More?
I do not charge you a consultation or enrollment fee for helping you compare and enroll in Medicare insurance plans.
When you enroll in a plan I represent, the insurance company may compensate me. You generally pay the same plan premium whether you enroll through a broker or directly through the insurance company.
Compensation should never decide which plan is recommended. Your doctors, prescriptions, coverage needs and total costs should drive the decision.
My Commitment to Transparency
- I will explain why an option may or may not fit you.
- I will not pretend that one company is right for everyone.
- I will tell you when remaining in your current coverage makes sense.
- I will explain important network and coverage limitations.
- I will remain available after enrollment.
An Important Limitation to Understand
No broker necessarily represents every insurance company or every plan available in your area. I compare plans from the companies with which I am contracted and certified.
You can also review all Medicare Advantage and Part D plans available in your area through Medicare.gov Plan Compare or call 1-800-MEDICARE.
Help After You Enroll Is Where a Broker Really Matters
Choosing coverage is only the beginning. Provider directories change, medications move between tiers, prior authorizations cause confusion and billing problems happen.
Provider and Network Questions
I can help investigate whether a doctor or facility participates and whom to contact when information conflicts.
Prescription Problems
I can help identify formulary, pharmacy, prior authorization or coverage-stage issues and explain the next step.
Unexpected Bills
I can help you understand an Explanation of Benefits and determine whether the provider, plan or Medicare should be contacted.
Annual Plan Changes
We can review important changes to premiums, benefits, networks and drug coverage before the next plan year.
How I Help You Choose Coverage
Listen First
I learn about your doctors, hospitals, medications, finances, travel needs and concerns before discussing specific plans.
Compare the Details
We compare the options I represent, including their costs, networks, drug coverage and important limitations.
Support Your Decision
You choose the coverage. I help with enrollment and remain your point of contact when Medicare questions arise later.
Questions to Ask Before Choosing a Broker
A broker should earn your trust. Before working with someone, ask clear questions about their experience, selection and post-enrollment service.
- Which insurance companies do you represent in my area?
- Will you check all of my doctors and prescriptions?
- Do you compare Medicare Advantage and Medigap?
- Will you explain why you recommend a particular option?
- Are you available after I enroll?
- Will you help me review plan changes in future years?
You Should Never Feel Pressured
Medicare is your coverage and your decision. You should receive enough information to understand the tradeoffs and make a comfortable choice.
Be cautious if someone refuses to check your providers or prescriptions, insists there is only one reasonable option or pressures you to enroll before your questions are answered.
Learn About Your Medicare Options
If you are still researching, these guides explain the main coverage paths a broker can help you compare.
Turning 65
Learn when to enroll in Medicare and what decisions you may need to make as your eligibility begins.
Medicare Advantage
Understand plan networks, copayments, maximum out-of-pocket limits and possible additional benefits.
Medicare Supplements
Learn how Medigap works with Original Medicare to help cover certain deductibles, copayments and coinsurance.
Medicare Part D
Learn how formularies, drug tiers, pharmacy networks and annual medication costs affect plan selection.
Broker Services
Review the Medicare products and personalized services available through Thompson Medicare Brokerage.
Medicare Questions
Browse straightforward explanations of commonly asked Medicare questions and coverage situations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Am I required to use a Medicare broker?
No. You may compare and enroll in Medicare plans yourself. A broker provides personalized research, explanation, enrollment assistance and ongoing support.
Does a Medicare broker work for Medicare?
No. Medicare brokers are licensed insurance professionals, not federal Medicare employees. Thompson Medicare Brokerage is not connected with or endorsed by the U.S. government or the federal Medicare program.
Will using a broker increase my plan premium?
Generally, no. You normally pay the same plan premium whether you enroll through a broker or directly with the insurance company. The insurer may compensate the broker for an eligible enrollment.
Does a broker represent every Medicare plan?
Not necessarily. Brokers can only market and enroll people in plans from insurance companies with which they are properly contracted and certified. Ask which companies the broker represents and use Medicare.gov if you want to see every Medicare Advantage and Part D option in your area.
Can a broker help if I am already enrolled?
Yes. A broker may be able to review your existing coverage, explain plan documents and help determine whom to contact about provider, prescription or billing problems. Enrollment changes are only permitted during applicable Medicare enrollment periods.
Can a broker guarantee that a claim will be approved?
No. A broker cannot override Medicare or an insurance company’s coverage decision. A good broker can help you understand the issue, locate the proper process and advocate for your concern to be reviewed appropriately.
Should my plan be reviewed every year?
Medicare Advantage and Part D plans can change their premiums, benefits, formularies, pharmacy arrangements and provider networks each year. Reviewing the Annual Notice of Change and checking your current needs is a sensible annual practice.
You Don’t Have to Figure Out Medicare Alone
I will listen to your situation, explain your options and help you compare the plans I represent. If you enroll through Thompson Medicare Brokerage, I will remain available as your year-round advocate—not disappear after the application.
Thompson Medicare Brokerage is not connected with or endorsed by the U.S. government or the federal Medicare program.