Every year, millions of Americans
search for a clear answer to one of the most common healthcare questions in the
United States- What is the difference between Medicare and Medicaid? The
two programs sound almost identical, and both are government-funded health
coverage options — but they serve entirely different populations, operate under
different rules, and cover different services. Confusing them can lead to
missed benefits, billing errors, or gaps in care.
This guide breaks down everything
you need to know about Medicare vs. Medicaid in plain language — who qualifies,
what each program covers, how much it costs, and what happens when someone
qualifies for both. Whether you are a senior approaching 65, a caregiver, or a
home care agency owner navigating payer sources, this is the definitive
comparison you need in 2026.
What Is Medicare?
Medicare is a federal health
insurance program administered by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS). It is designed primarily for people aged 65 and older, but also
extends coverage to younger individuals with qualifying disabilities or
specific medical conditions.
As of 2024, nearly 68 million
Americans were enrolled in Medicare. Because it is a federal program, Medicare
benefits and rules are uniform across all 50 states — your coverage in
Florida is identical to your coverage in Alaska.
Who Qualifies for Medicare?
You automatically qualify for Medicare when you turn 65. If you are under 65, you may still qualify if you meet any of the following criteria:
·
People aged 65 or
older, regardless of income
·
People under 65
with certain disabilities
·
People with
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) or ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease)
Because Medicare is a federal program, its
rules and benefits are the same across all 50 states.
The Four Parts of Medicare Explained
Medicare is organized into four
distinct parts, each covering a different category of care:
- Part A (Hospital Insurance): Covers inpatient hospital stays, skilled nursing
facility care (short-term), hospice care, and some home health services.
Most people who have paid Medicare payroll taxes for at least 10 years pay
no monthly premium for Part A.
- Part B (Medical Insurance): Covers outpatient services, doctor visits, preventive
care, lab tests, and durable medical equipment. In 2025, the standard
monthly premium for Part B was $185, with a $257 annual deductible.
- Part C (Medicare Advantage): A private insurance alternative that bundles Parts A
and B, often including dental, vision, hearing, and prescription drug
coverage.
- Part D (Prescription Drug Coverage): Offered through private insurers under federal
contract, Part D covers the cost of prescription medications.
What Medicare Does NOT Cover
It is critical to understand what
Medicare excludes. Routine dental care, hearing aids, vision exams, and — most
significantly — long-term custodial care in nursing homes are not
covered by Medicare. This is one of the biggest distinctions between Medicare
and Medicaid.
What Is Medicaid?
Medicaid is a joint federal and
state assistance program that provides healthcare coverage to individuals
and families with low income and limited financial resources. Unlike Medicare,
Medicaid eligibility and benefits vary significantly depending on the state you
live in.
Today, more than 76 million
Americans are enrolled in Medicaid — more than any private insurance option
covers. This makes Medicaid the single largest health coverage program in the
country by enrollment.
Who Qualifies for Medicaid?
Medicaid eligibility is based
primarily on income level, though states set their own specific
thresholds. Generally, Medicaid covers:
- Low-income adults and families
- Children and pregnant women
- Seniors with limited income and assets
- People with physical or intellectual disabilities
- Individuals receiving Supplemental Security Income
(SSI)
Since the Affordable Care Act (ACA), many states have
expanded Medicaid coverage to include adults earning up to 138% of the federal
poverty level (FPL). However, not every state has opted into this expansion.
What Medicaid Covers
All state Medicaid programs are
federally required to cover a core set of services, including inpatient and
outpatient hospital services, physician services, laboratory and imaging
services, and home health services. Many states go beyond these mandated
minimums and also cover:
- Prescription drugs
- Dental and vision care
- Physical and occupational therapy
- Non-emergency medical transportation
- Home and community-based services (HCBS)
- Long-term nursing home care — the most significant coverage advantage over
Medicare
For home care and assisted living
agency owners, Medicaid is often the primary payer source. Understanding
state-specific waiver programs, billing compliance, and documentation
requirements is essential to operating a financially sustainable agency.
Medicare vs. Medicaid: Side-by-Side Comparison
|
Category |
Medicare |
Medicaid |
|
Program Type |
Federal health insurance |
Federal + state assistance program |
|
Who It Serves |
People 65+ or with qualifying
disabilities |
Low-income individuals of all ages |
|
Administered By |
Federal government (CMS) |
Individual state governments |
|
Income Requirements |
None |
Yes — income and asset limits
apply |
|
Consistency Across States |
Uniform nationwide |
Varies significantly by state |
|
Long-Term Care Coverage |
Not covered |
Covered in most states |
|
Cost to Beneficiary |
Premiums, deductibles, and copays |
Minimal to no cost; small copays
only |
|
Prescription Drug Coverage |
Part D (optional add-on) |
Included in most state programs |
|
Dental and Vision |
Limited (through Medicare
Advantage only) |
Often covered depending on state |
How Medicare and Medicaid Are Funded
The funding structures of these two
programs reflect their different administrative models.
Medicare is funded through a
combination of federal payroll taxes (the Medicare tax withheld from wages),
monthly premiums paid by enrollees, and general federal revenue. It operates
from two federal trust funds managed by the U.S. Treasury.
Medicaid is funded jointly by
the federal government and each individual state. The federal government's contribution
is calculated using the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP), which
varies based on each state's per capita income. Wealthier states receive less
federal matching, while lower-income states receive more.
Important 2026 Update: Recent federal legislative changes — specifically the
"One Big Beautiful Bill Act" signed in July 2025 — are reducing the
amount of federal Medicaid funding flowing to states. As a result, millions of
Medicaid beneficiaries could potentially face coverage losses or reduced
benefits in the coming years. For agency owners and care providers, staying
current on state-level Medicaid policy changes is more important than ever.
Can You Have Both Medicare and Medicaid?
Yes — and it is more common than
most people realize. Individuals who qualify for both programs are known as dual-eligible
beneficiaries.
Approximately 12.5 million Americans
are dual eligible, meaning they qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid
simultaneously
Here is how dual coverage works in
practice:
- Medicare pays first
for all covered medical services — hospital stays, physician visits,
diagnostics, and skilled nursing care
- Medicaid pays second,
covering costs that Medicare does not — including premiums, deductibles,
copayments, and long-term custodial care
This combination provides the most
comprehensive and most affordable coverage available under any US government
health program. Many dual-eligible individuals can access a Dual Special
Needs Plan (D-SNP) through Medicare Advantage, which coordinates both
benefits under a single plan.
Why This Distinction Matters for Home Care Agencies
For professionals operating home
care agencies, assisted living facilities, or home health businesses,
understanding the difference between Medicare and Medicaid is not just academic
— it directly affects how you bill, what services you can offer, and which
regulatory frameworks govern your operations.
- Medicare-certified home health agencies must meet strict federal conditions of participation,
provide skilled nursing and therapy services, and bill through CMS using
OASIS documentation
- Medicaid waiver programs fund non-medical home care and personal care services,
with eligibility and reimbursement rates determined at the state level
- Dual-eligible clients
require coordination between both payers, and billing errors are among the
leading causes of audit risk for agencies serving this population
If you are building or expanding a
home care or assisted living agency that accepts Medicaid or coordinates with
Medicare, professional compliance and operational guidance is essential from
day one.
Common Myths — Debunked
Myth 1: Medicare and Medicaid are the same thing.
Fact: They are two separate programs with different purposes
and eligibility criteria.
Myth 2: Medicare is only for low-income people.
Fact: Medicare is available to everyone who meets age or
disability requirements, regardless of income.
Myth 3: Medicaid is the same nationwide.
Fact: Medicaid varies by state, and each state decides who
qualifies and what benefits are offered.
Myth 4: Medicare covers long-term care.
Fact: It does not. Only Medicaid covers long-term custodial
care in most cases.
Myth 5: You can’t have both.
Fact: Many people qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid, especially older adults with low income.
Medicare and Medicaid were both
established in 1965 to protect Americans who face the greatest barriers to
healthcare access. Six decades later, they remain the backbone of the US
healthcare safety net — but they do very different jobs.
Medicare is age-based federal health insurance for seniors and
people with disabilities. Medicaid is income-based state-federal
assistance covering a broader population, with deeper benefits for long-term
and community-based care. Understanding which program applies to your situation
— or your clients' situations — is the foundation of smart healthcare planning
and compliant agency operations.
For agency owners looking to build
Medicaid-ready, Medicare-compliant home care operations, explore our full suite
of home care consulting resources and policy documentation.