Kansas has approximately 540,000 Medicare beneficiaries , with the largest concentrations in Wichita, the KC metro (Wyandotte and Johnson counties), Topeka, and Lawrence. Medicare Advantage penetration is meaningful in the metros but below national averages statewide, with rural counties often offering few or no Advantage options.1
What Medicare covers, and what it doesn't
Medicare is health insurance. It is not long-term-care insurance. This is the most expensive misconception in caregiving. Kansas families learn it most often when the 100-day Medicare rehab benefit ends after a hospital stay.
What Medicare does cover:
- Part A (Hospital). Inpatient stays, skilled nursing rehab for up to 100 days after a qualifying hospital admission, hospice, limited home health.
- Part B (Medical). Doctor visits, outpatient procedures, durable medical equipment, mental health, preventive care, ambulance.
- Part D (Drugs). Prescription drug coverage, standalone or bundled into a Medicare Advantage plan.
What Medicare does not cover:
- Assisted living (any state, any setting)
- Memory care
- Custodial nursing-home care beyond the 100-day rehab window
- Long-term in-home aide hours
- Dental, vision, or hearing in Original Medicare
Original Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage in Kansas
Every Medicare-eligible person in the US chooses between two broad structures: Original Medicare (Parts A and B, usually paired with a Medigap supplement and a Part D drug plan) or Medicare Advantage (Part C, a private plan that bundles A, B, and usually D plus extras).
Kansas Medicare Advantage penetration is below the national average, with meaningful competition in Wichita and the KC metro but limited options in rural counties.2
When Original Medicare + Medigap usually beats Advantage
- Your parent lives in rural Kansas where Advantage networks may not cover local providers.
- Your parent travels frequently or splits time across states.
- Your parent has a serious or complex condition and wants unrestricted specialist access.
- Your parent can afford the higher monthly premium for a Medigap supplement — in Kansas, $130–$250/month is typical for Plan G.
When Advantage usually beats Original Medicare
- Your parent lives in Wichita or the KC metro and is generally healthy.
- Original Medicare premiums + Medigap + Part D exceed your parent's budget, and a $0-premium Advantage plan is available.
- Your parent values the extras — dental, vision, hearing, gym — that many Advantage plans bundle in.
Medigap in Kansas
If your parent chooses Original Medicare, they almost certainly also want a Medigap (Medicare Supplement) policy. Medigap plans are federally standardized — Plan G in Kansas offers the same benefits as Plan G in any other state — but Kansas pricing and switching rules have specific details:
- Kansas is an age-rated state. Premiums rise as your parent ages.
- Guaranteed issue applies during the 6-month Initial Enrollment Period, when your parent turns 65 or first enrolls in Medicare Part B.
- Kansas does not have an annual no-underwriting switching window. Once your parent picks a plan, switching can require requalifying medically.3
Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs) in Kansas
If your parent has limited income, they may qualify for one of the federal Medicare Savings Programs, administered in Kansas through KDHE and DCF:
- QMB. Pays Part A and Part B premiums, deductibles, and coinsurance. Income limit ~$1,255/month individual (2026).
- SLMB. Pays Part B premium. Income limit ~$1,506/month individual.
- QI. Pays Part B premium. Income limit ~$1,695/month individual.
SHICK counselors can help with the application.
Annual Enrollment Period (AEP) in Kansas
Medicare AEP runs from October 15 through December 7 each year. During this window your parent can:
- Switch from Original Medicare to Medicare Advantage (or vice versa)
- Switch from one Advantage plan to another
- Add, drop, or switch a standalone Part D plan
Wichita and KC see substantial AEP marketing. The single most important thing to know is that most ads are designed to drive enrollment in a specific plan, not to help your parent compare plans. The right comparison tool is Medicare.gov's Plan Finder.4
There is also a Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (MA OEP) from January 1 through March 31 each year, during which someone already on Advantage can switch to a different Advantage plan or back to Original Medicare with Part D.
Where to get free help in Kansas
SHICK(Senior Health Insurance Counseling for Kansas) is Kansas's federally-funded SHIP, run by KDADS. Trained volunteers across Kansas provide free, unbiased Medicare counseling — they don't sell plans, take commissions, or represent any insurer. Call 1-800-860-5260 to find a counselor near your parent.5
For specific Medicaid-related questions where Medicaid and Medicare interact, see our Kansas Medicaid guide.