If you have Medicare and a limited income, you may qualify for a Medicare Savings Program (MSP) that pays some or all of your Medicare premiums, deductibles, and copays for you. In 2026, the standard Part B premium alone is $202.90 per month, so qualifying for even the most basic MSP tier saves you over $2,400 per year.
MSPs are run by each state's Medicaid program. Federal law sets a minimum income floor, but many states have raised those limits or eliminated the resource test entirely, meaning more people qualify than the federal numbers suggest. This guide covers all four MSP tiers, the 2026 federal income and resource limits, which states are more generous, and exactly how to apply.
Coverage Breakdown
| MSP Program | FPL Range | Monthly Income (Individual) | Monthly Income (Couple) | What It Pays |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QMB (Qualified Medicare Beneficiary) | Up to 100% FPL | $1,350/mo | $1,824/mo | Part A + B premiums, deductibles, coinsurance, copays |
| SLMB (Specified Low-Income Beneficiary) | 100% to 120% FPL | $1,616/mo | $2,184/mo | Part B premium only ($202.90/mo in 2026) |
| QI (Qualifying Individual) | 120% to 135% FPL | $1,816/mo | $2,455/mo | Part B premium only; first-come basis, enrollment may close |
| QDWI (Qualified Disabled Working Individual) | Up to 200% FPL (with disregards) | Up to ~$5,405/mo | Up to ~$7,299/mo | Part A premium only; for working disabled under age 65 |
Income limits include the $20/month general income disregard applied federally. QDWI also applies a $65 earned-income disregard. Resource limits for QMB/SLMB/QI: $9,950 individual / $14,910 couple (2026). Many states have eliminated resource limits entirely. Limits are higher in Alaska and Hawaii.
Source: NCOA 2026 MSP limits, SSA.gov, Medicare.gov
What Each MSP Program Covers in 2026
The four MSP tiers provide different levels of financial relief. QMB is the most comprehensive. For the full Medicare cost structure, see Medicare free or cost. SLMB and QI are narrower but still valuable because the Part B premium of $202.90 per month in 2026 adds up to $2,434.80 per year.
- QMB: Part A premium (if you do not have premium-free Part A), Part B premium ($202.90/mo), Part A inpatient deductible ($1,736 per benefit period in 2026), Part B deductible ($283 in 2026), and all Medicare coinsurance and copays.
- SLMB: Part B premium only. You still pay Part A costs, deductibles, and coinsurance.
- QI: Part B premium only, same as SLMB. QI is funded by a federal block grant and enrollment closes when funding runs out each year. Reapply annually.
- QDWI: Part A premium only (up to $565/month in 2026 for those with fewer than 30 quarters of Medicare-covered work). For working individuals under 65 who lost premium-free Part A when they returned to work.
States With Higher Income Limits or No Resource Test
Federal law sets a minimum floor for MSP eligibility, but states can be more generous. As of 2026, the following states have eliminated the resource test for MSPs, meaning you qualify based on income alone regardless of savings or other assets: Alabama, Arizona, Connecticut, Delaware, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Vermont, and the District of Columbia.
California has a very high resource limit of $130,000 for individuals and $195,000 for couples in 2026, which effectively functions like no limit for most applicants. Some states also use higher income thresholds than the federal floor, and a handful cover categories of people who do not qualify under the federal rules. If you live in any of the 40 states that have expanded Medicaid, you may also qualify for full Medicaid, which provides additional coverage on top of MSP benefits.
| State | Resource Test | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Arizona | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| California | $130,000 individual / $195,000 couple | Very high limit; effectively no limit for most |
| Connecticut | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Delaware | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Louisiana | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Maine | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Massachusetts | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Mississippi | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| New Mexico | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| New York | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Oregon | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| Vermont | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
| DC | None | Income-only test for QMB/SLMB/QI |
All other states use the federal resource limits: $9,950 for individuals and $14,910 for couples in 2026 (certain assets are excluded, including your primary home, one car, personal belongings, and life insurance with cash value up to $1,500). Contact your state Medicaid agency for the current rules.
Source: NCOA, MedicareInteractive.org, state Medicaid agencies
Extra Help and Part D: The Automatic Bonus of MSP Enrollment
When you are enrolled in QMB, SLMB, or QI, you automatically qualify for Extra Help (also called the Low Income Subsidy, or LIS) for Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage. This happens automatically, without a separate application. Extra Help in 2026 caps your out-of-pocket Part D drug costs and reduces or eliminates monthly plan premiums. In 2026, the Part D out-of-pocket cap for all beneficiaries is $2,100, and Extra Help beneficiaries pay far less, often $0 to $4.50 per generic and $0 to $11.20 per brand-name drug.
QDWI enrollment does not automatically confer Extra Help, but QDWI beneficiaries may apply separately for Extra Help if their income and resources fall within Part D LIS limits.
