Medicare for Connecticut–Florida snowbirds.
If you split your year between Connecticut and Florida, your Medicare Advantage plan likely leaves you exposed in one state. Here's why, and what plan structure actually covers you in both — with Connecticut-specific Medigap pricing notes.
The Connecticut–Florida snowbird Medicare problem
CT snowbirds favor southwest Florida. During your time in Florida, you'll need routine care: PCP visits, prescription refills, possibly specialist follow-ups. If you're on a Medicare Advantage HMO plan tied to your Connecticut county, that Florida care typically isn't covered — only emergencies are.
The result is one of the most expensive Medicare mistakes snowbirds make: a "$0/month" MA plan ending up costing $5,000–$15,000 in surprise out-of-network bills during a single snowbird season.
What doesn't work for Connecticut–Florida snowbirds
- Medicare Advantage HMO — service area limited to your home county; routine Florida care not covered
- Local PPO with limited geographic reach
- Plans with split-state networks but heavy referral requirements
What does work
- Original Medicare + Medigap Plan G + standalone Part D — accepted nationally, no networks, predictable costs
- National PPO Medicare Advantage — only some carriers offer truly national PPOs; verify network in both Connecticut and Florida
- Two-state coordination plans — rare carrier-specific arrangements
Connecticut-specific Medigap notes
Connecticut has continuous Medigap open enrollment year-round (no underwriting). CT also bans Medigap excess charges.
What about Florida pricing?
Your Medigap is priced based on your state of legal residence, not where you physically are during the year. As a Connecticut resident snowbirding to Florida, you'd buy a Medigap policy at Connecticut rates, and it would cover Medicare-approved care in both states identically.
If you formally relocate to Florida for residency, your Medigap would re-rate to Florida pricing at next renewal. Florida Medigap rates tend to be higher than many northern states due to the older average member population — plan accordingly if you do change residency.
Your Connecticut–Florida snowbird checklist
- Confirm both addresses. Legal residence (driver's license, voter registration) and snowbird location.
- List doctors in both states. Your Connecticut PCP, cardiologist, and any specialists. Your Florida primary care if you've established one.
- List your prescriptions. Part D plans have national pharmacy networks; your meds transfer to Florida chains seamlessly.
- Project your income for the next 2 years. Used for IRMAA exposure. Snowbirds with rental income or RMDs may face IRMAA surprises.
- Decide on tax residency. Connecticut or Florida? Has implications for Medigap pricing, state taxes, and voter registration.
- Plan around enrollment windows. AEP runs Oct 15 – Dec 7. Many Connecticut snowbirds are mid-migration during AEP — plan accordingly.
Free Connecticut–Florida snowbird Medicare consultation
A licensed advisor walks through your specific Connecticut and Florida doctors, projects costs across all plan structures, and recommends the right path. Same-business-day callback, no obligation.