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Long-term care

Medicare's 100 days: a bridge, not a destination

Medicare's skilled nursing benefit is 100 days per benefit period, after a qualifying 3-day inpatient hospital stay: days 1–20 cost $0, days 21–100 cost $217 a day in 2026, and day 101 costs everything — it covers recovery, not residence, and ends earlier if you stop improving toward skilled goals.

The benefit, precisely

Days (per benefit period)You pay (2026)Who else might pay it
1–20$0
21–100$217/dayTFL and CHAMPVA generally cover this coinsurance; most Medigap plans do too
101+All of itNobody in the Medicare universe — this is where the veteran options take over

Three gates guard the door: a qualifying inpatient stay (3+ midnights as an admitted inpatient — "observation status" nights don't count, and asking "am I admitted or under observation?" is the single highest-value question a family can put to a hospitalist); admission to a Medicare-certified SNF generally within 30 days; and a daily skilled need — therapy or skilled nursing aimed at the condition. A "benefit period" resets only after 60 consecutive days out of hospital/SNF care, so the 100 days can renew — across a gap, not in a row.

Where families get blindsided

  • "Plateaued" doesn't legally end coverage — but it ends it in practice. Under the Jimmo settlement, Medicare covers skilled care to maintain function, not just improve it; facilities still issue cutoff notices on improvement logic. Appeal rights exist and expedited appeals frequently win days back — the notice itself explains the fast-track number.
  • The 100 days were never the plan. Median covered SNF stays run a few weeks; the benefit is a bridge to home or to a long-term arrangement. Families who start the VA placement or A&A paperwork on day 5 are calm on day 95.
  • Medicare Advantage runs the same benefit through plan rules. The day structure holds, but prior authorization and concurrent review can end MA-covered stays earlier than Original Medicare's would — a real line item in the OM-vs-MA decision for anyone eyeing future care needs. (Some MA plans waive the 3-day stay; the trade is the review regime.)
  • Home health and hospice are the other two skilled doors. Intermittent skilled care at home for the homebound, and the hospice benefit at end of life, are both Medicare-covered without the SNF gates — and both coordinate fine with VA care, which never coordinates with anything.

The 100 days are a countdown clock for the real plan. An agent can confirm what your wraparound covers during them — and what nothing covers after — free, while there's still runway.

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Or compare plans yourself at PlanMatch’s plan finder, or contact Medicare.gov / 1-800-MEDICARE.

Frequently asked questions

How much does Medicare pay for a nursing home in 2026?
Skilled stays only: $0 for days 1–20, then $217/day coinsurance for days 21–100 per benefit period (commonly covered by TFL, CHAMPVA, or Medigap), then nothing. Custodial long-term care isn't covered at any point.
What counts as a qualifying hospital stay?
Three consecutive midnights as a formally admitted inpatient — observation status doesn't count, which is why asking about admission status during the stay matters so much.
Can the 100 days renew?
Yes — after 60 consecutive days without inpatient hospital or skilled care, a new benefit period (and a fresh 100 days, behind a new qualifying stay) begins.
Does TRICARE for Life add days after 100?
TFL covers the $217 coinsurance during days 21–100 and can cover skilled care per TRICARE rules, but neither program covers custodial long-term care — day 101 of custodial need belongs to the VA/Medicaid options.

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.

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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.