Annual Enrollment, translated for veterans
Medicare's Annual Enrollment Period runs October 15 – December 7 for January 1 changes — and most of its advertising doesn't apply to you: TFL and CHAMPVA households usually have nothing to shop, VA-only veterans on Original Medicare can ignore the noise unless adding something, and the people who genuinely need AEP are veterans holding MA or Part D plans worth re-checking.
What AEP actually is — and the calendar around it
October 15 to December 7, anyone with Medicare can join, drop, or switch Medicare Advantage and Part D plans, effective January 1. Around it sit the windows veterans confuse with it: the MA Open Enrollment Period (January 1 – March 31, one switch or a return to Original Medicare for those already in MA), the creditable coverage SEP (the year-round door military-coverage holders can use without waiting for fall), and the monthly SEPs duals and Extra Help recipients hold. AEP matters most to people who have none of those keys.
Your October checklist, by situation
| Your setup | AEP action | Why |
|---|---|---|
| TFL or CHAMPVA + Original Medicare | Usually none | The wraparound already out-builds what the ads sell; the one annual read is your numbers update, not a plan finder |
| VA only + Original Medicare (± Medigap) | None required — AEP doesn't touch Medigap | Use it only if adding: an MA plan for extras, or Part D for civilian prescribers — both January 1 moves made here |
| Any veteran in Medicare Advantage | Re-shop, every year | Plans change benefits, networks, drug tiers, and givebacks annually — the Annual Notice of Change (September mail) is the homework; same-plan-by-default is how good fits go stale |
| Any veteran holding a Part D plan | Re-check against your military benefit | Formularies move; so does the answer to "do I still need this at all?" — the three-way comparison, re-run with this year's drug list |
| In an MAPD, drugs covered by VA/TFL/CHAMPVA | Consider the MA-only switch | AEP works for it — though the SEP means you never had to wait for October |
Reading the season's advertising like a veteran
- "$0 premium" and "Part B giveback" are real plan features with real trade-offs — the giveback page shows how to read the whole plan behind the rebate.
- "Benefits you're entitled to" pitched at veterans usually means an MA-only plan priced around your VA drug coverage — sometimes genuinely good, never automatic, and worth the same county-level comparison as any plan.
- Nothing in any ad affects VA, TFL, or CHAMPVA themselves. No AEP choice can take military benefits away — the risk is narrower and realer: an MAPD quietly displacing Express Scripts or ending Meds by Mail. Know which drug coverage you're agreeing to before December 7.
- Missed the window? January–March handles MA escapes; the creditable coverage SEP handles the military-coverage cases; and "do nothing" remains a fully valid AEP outcome — the plans renew themselves.
AEP is when agents earn their keep honestly: one October conversation with your drug list and ZIP code either finds January 1 savings or confirms you're already set. Both answers are free.
Book the October LookOr compare plans yourself at PlanMatch.com, or contact Medicare.gov / 1-800-MEDICARE.
Frequently asked questions
When is Medicare's Annual Enrollment Period?
Do I need to do anything during AEP if I have TRICARE for Life?
Can I change my Medigap plan during AEP?
What happens if I do nothing during AEP?
Do veterans get a special enrollment period instead?
You earned these benefits. Make them work together.
Whether you keep exactly what you have or add Medicare coverage alongside it, the right answer depends on your health, budget, and how you like to get care.
No cost, no obligation. You can also get help from Medicare.gov, 1-800-MEDICARE (TTY 1-877-486-2048), or your local SHIP office.