Employer coverage and the VA: who can safely delay Medicare
Employer coverage from current work at a company with 20 or more employees — yours or your spouse's — is creditable for Medicare Part B and lets you delay penalty-free. VA Healthcare, COBRA, and retiree plans don't qualify, and under-20 employers leave Medicare as the intended primary payer.
The 20-employee line, and why it exists
Medicare Secondary Payer rules draw the line at 20: at 20+ employees, the group health plan pays primary for working 65+ employees and Medicare (if you have it) pays second — so the law lets you skip Part B's $202.90/month without penalty while that arrangement lasts. At under 20, the order flips: Medicare is the intended primary payer, and an employee without Part B can find the employer plan paying only what it would have after Medicare — a hole with your name on it. Confirm the count with HR, in writing; "small company, big parent" situations follow the controlled-group rules, which is exactly the kind of detail worth a written answer.
How the three coverages actually stack while you work
| Your setup | Who pays for civilian care | Where the VA fits |
|---|---|---|
| Employer plan (20+), no Medicare yet | Employer plan, alone | VA care runs separately as always — copays by priority group, and the VA can bill your employer plan for non-service-connected care |
| Employer plan + Part A only | Employer primary, Part A secondary on hospital stays | Unchanged — and Part A is free for most, HSA contributors excepted |
| Employer plan + Parts A & B | Employer primary, Medicare secondary | Unchanged; TFL/CHAMPVA, if you have them, pay after both |
Notice what's constant: the VA never enters the coordination. It's a provider, not a payer, at 55, 65, and 75 alike. What changes at 65 is only the Medicare question — and the answer keys entirely off the employer plan, never the VA enrollment card in your wallet.
The two impostors
- COBRA. It extends your old plan, but it is not "current employment" — the 8-month SEP clock starts when the job ends, not when COBRA does. Veterans who ride 18 months of COBRA past 65 routinely discover they've burned the SEP and face the penalty plus the January GEP wait. (COBRA drug coverage can still be creditable for Part D if the plan certifies it — the two tracks differ.)
- Retiree coverage. Same flaw: not current employment. A retiree plan can be a fine supplement to Medicare; it's never a substitute for enrolling.
"I have VA care and COBRA and a retiree plan — surely that's enough." It's three non-creditable coverages stacked. For Part B purposes, zero plus zero plus zero is zero. The penalty calculator prices what that misunderstanding costs per decade.
Your benefits mix is unique. A licensed agent can review how Medicare options coordinate with your VA, TRICARE for Life, or CHAMPVA coverage — at no cost and no obligation.
Find a Medicare AgentOr compare plans yourself at PlanMatch.com, or contact Medicare.gov / 1-800-MEDICARE.
Frequently asked questions
Does my spouse's employer plan let me delay Part B?
Can the VA bill my employer insurance?
I work for a 15-person company. What should I do at 65?
Is COBRA creditable coverage?
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.