A lot depends on your health. I take a cancer drug that is $1`80,000/year without insurance. I pay $2100 the first of January and for the rest of this year, all my drugs are "no charge". And I take a lot of meds. I also have at least one PET scan and one CAT scan a hear, numerous doctors visits with oncologists, dermatologists (my previous cancer drug for chronic lymphocytic leukemia caused two severe skin cancers on my back...Mohs surgery required), cardiologist (had a quad bypass 21 years ago) and family doctor (I am insulin dependent also caused by my cancer drug). Yes, I pay just over $220/month for Medicare supplement Plan F but if I was on an Advantage plan, the out of pocket costs for all this stuff would exceed my premium payments. So I never get a bill for any service; the supplement pays everything that Medicare does not cover. Also, I pay $96/year for my Part D coverage. It covers all my very numerous medications.
It's hard to predict what out of pocket costs would be as they depend on area and policy.
My Advantage MOOP is (max out of pocket) is $3,500. a year. The policy cost me the Part B cost of $202 a month vs the $430 that you are paying.
Specialists cost me $5 co-pay, Family doctor $0 co-pay. Drug plan included and co-pays for the drugs so I dont have to pay a deductible upfront.
In addition two dental visits per year and up to $2,500 in dental work included.
Also free eye exam and $300 in free eyewear or contacts
Plan F not available to the OP but plan G is. This is were you live comes in important, A place like NY where
@demarpaint lives plan g is off the wall expensive however so is Advantage plans in NY with stupid high out of pocket expenses.
I agree with you, depends on your health, but your cancer and all drug costs are no different with an Advantage plan. Scans can cost $150 to $300 or so a year, again depends on the area. It truly is a case on the individual, where they live, how their health is and how much they want to pay. With that said, the co-pays with Advantage plans is greatly exaggerated from reality.
I will say this, no matter what you choose, Medicare is a GREAT system, one of few government agencies in my mind that works so well.
How you chose does matter, once in an Advantage Plan, you are given one year to opt out if new to medicare and able go back to supplement in many states, if you dont you are stuck in the Advantage plans system but can switch those plans any year of your choosing. Only other way to go back to traditional medicare is if the Advantage plan you have is no longer offered the following year or if you move to an area that its not offered.
It not as simple as it was just a few years ago, Advantage plans were squeezed by the government not giving them increases annual increases in payments, from the pervious administration that has since changed so time will tell.
For the 5 years since having Medicare, I have had Advantage Plans the first 3 years, then Medicare A,B,N&D for the 4th year and now back to an Advantage plan for the 5th year. I just dont want to pay an extra $300 or more a month for the same health care. I do get concerned about the rising MOOPs but so far I am in a state with reasonable costs.