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Medigap rules in

Minnesota

Structural exception

State does not use the federal 10-letter system

What the rule says

Per medicare.gov: "In Minnesota, Medigap policies are standardized in a different way and offer these basic benefits: Inpatient hospital costs; Medical costs; Blood; Part A hospice and respite cost sharing; Parts A & B [...]" Minnesota uses a Basic Plan and an Extended Basic Plan plus Minnesota-specific versions of K, L, M, N (and high-deductible Plan F for pre-2020 eligibles). Optional add-on benefits are sold as state-defined riders. The federal 6-month OEP guaranteed-issue rules still apply.

Mechanics

Structural exception: Basic Plan + Extended Basic Plan + Minnesota versions of K/L/M/N (and high-deductible F for pre-2020 eligibles). Optional riders for additional coverage. Federal 10-letter A–N plans (A, B, C, D, F, G in their federal form) are NOT sold in Minnesota.

Minnesota Medigap rule

Last verified:Source:medicare.gov — Compare Medigap plan benefits (Minnesota)

Important: Minnesota does not use the federal A–N letter system

If you read about “Plan G” or “Plan N” on a national Medigap site, those letters apply to the other 47 states (and DC). In Minnesota, your Medigap policies are sold under a different state-specific structure. Talk to your Minnesota SHIP counselor (below) to understand the Minnesota plan layout.

Your federal 6-month Medigap window

Regardless of Minnesota’s state-specific rules, the federal 6-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period (per 42 U.S.C. § 1395ss) applies to you. It begins the first month you are both 65+ and enrolled in Medicare Part B and runs six full calendar months. Find your specific window dates →

Minnesota state contacts

SHIP counselor (free)

1-800-333-2433

mn.gov/senior-linkage-line

Federally-funded benefits counseling. No commission. Not a broker.

State insurance department

medicare.gov — Compare Medigap plan benefits (Minnesota)

mn.gov/commerce/insurance

For complaints about a Medigap insurer, premium disputes, or coverage issues.

Federal “guaranteed-issue” protections may re-open a Medigap window for specific qualifying events

Even after your federal 6-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period closes, federal law (per 42 U.S.C. § 1395ss and CMS regulations) re-opens a guaranteed-issue Medigap window for several qualifying events. During a guaranteed-issue window, insurers cannot deny you a Medigap policy based on health, charge a higher premium based on health, or require medical underwriting.

  • Loss of group employer coverage

    If your employer or union health plan ends or you involuntarily lose your group coverage (including coverage you had through your spouse), federal law re-opens a guaranteed-issue window for Medigap. The window typically begins no later than 63 days before the date your group coverage ends and runs for 63 days after the coverage ends.

  • Medicare Advantage trial right (first 12 months)

    If you joined a Medicare Advantage plan when you first became eligible for Medicare at age 65, and you decide within the first 12 months of MA enrollment that you'd rather have Original Medicare with a Medigap policy, federal law gives you a guaranteed-issue right to buy any Medigap policy sold by any insurer in your state.

  • Medicare Advantage plan termination or service-area reduction

    If your Medicare Advantage plan leaves the Medicare program, ends coverage in your area, or you move out of the plan's service area, federal law gives you a guaranteed-issue right to certain Medigap policies.

  • Loss of Medicaid (in certain configurations)

    If you had a Medicare Supplement Select policy and you move out of its service area, OR if certain Medicaid-related coverage transitions occur, federal guaranteed-issue rights may apply. Verify your specific situation with your state SHIP counselor — eligibility is fact-specific.

  • Insurer bankruptcy or fraud-related coverage end

    If your Medigap insurance company goes bankrupt and you lose coverage, or if you lose Medigap coverage through no fault of your own (including misrepresentation by the insurer), federal law re-opens a guaranteed-issue window.

If you think a guaranteed-issue protection may apply to you:

Federal qualifying events have specific timing requirements (some windows are 63 days, others are 60). Contact your state SHIP counselor for free, federally-funded benefits counseling — they can confirm whether your specific situation qualifies and help you act within the window.

Related state pages

Other states with the same category as Minnesota, plus the full 50-state grid.