Medicare in Sedona, Arizona
Your local guide to 2026 Medicare costs, enrollment deadlines, and free Sedona-area help — plus an easy way to compare plans and enroll.
Medicare in Sedona
Sedona spans parts of Yavapai and Coconino Counties and is a sought-after retirement and second-home community. Because the local provider network is smaller than in the metros and many residents travel, Sedona Medicare shoppers often weigh the nationwide access of Original Medicare against the extra benefits of an Advantage plan.
Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage?
Sedona's many active retirees and part-time residents make portable coverage — Original Medicare with Medigap — a frequent choice. Original Medicare (Parts A & B) lets you use any provider in the U.S. that accepts Medicare and pairs well with a Medigap supplement and a Part D drug plan for predictable costs. Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans bundle your coverage, often add dental, vision and hearing, and may have low or $0 premiums — but they use local networks, so your Sedona-area doctors and pharmacies need to be in-network.
Whichever direction fits you best, you can compare Sedona plans and enroll online, or talk it through first with a free SHIP counselor or licensed agent Darin Weidauer.
2026 quick costs
Standard federal amounts
| Part B premium | $202.90/mo |
| Part B deductible | $283 |
| Part A deductible | $1,736 |
| Part D drug cap | $2,100 |
| Part A premium (most) | $0 |
See the full 2026 cost breakdown for Parts A, B, C, D and IRMAA.
Sedona-area Medicare resources
These services are free and don't sell insurance — ideal for unbiased answers before you choose a plan.
Where to turn in Sedona
Find your enrollment window
Enter the month and year you turn 65.
Medicare enrollment windows
These deadlines are the same for everyone in Sedona and across Arizona.
Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)
Your first chance to sign up: the 3 months before your 65th-birthday month, the birthday month itself, and the 3 months after. Enrolling in the first three months means coverage can start the month you turn 65.
Best time to enroll for most people– Dec 7
Fall Open Enrollment (AEP)
Every autumn, anyone with Medicare can join, switch or drop a Medicare Advantage or Part D drug plan. Changes take effect January 1. Review your plan's Annual Notice of Change each fall — costs and drug lists shift yearly.
– Mar 31
Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment
If you're already in a Medicare Advantage plan, you get one more chance early in the year to switch to a different Advantage plan or return to Original Medicare (and add a drug plan).
– Mar 31
General Enrollment Period (GEP)
For people who missed their Initial Enrollment Period and don't qualify for a special exception. Coverage starts the month after you sign up — and late penalties may apply.
Penalties may applySpecial Enrollment Period (SEP)
Life events can open a no-penalty window — for example, losing employer coverage when you retire (you generally get 8 months to enroll in Part B), moving out of your plan's area, or qualifying for Extra Help. If you're still working at 65 with good employer coverage, an SEP often lets you delay safely.
Medigap Open Enrollment
A one-time, 6-month window that begins when you're 65 and enrolled in Part B. During it, insurers can't deny you a Medigap policy or charge more for pre-existing conditions. After it closes, that protection generally goes away.
Guaranteed acceptanceMost people become eligible at age 65. You can also qualify earlier if you've received Social Security Disability benefits for 24 months, or if you have ALS or end-stage renal disease. Your Initial Enrollment Period covers the 7 months around your 65th birthday.
If you're already getting Social Security before 65, you're usually enrolled in Parts A and B automatically and your card arrives by mail. If you're not drawing Social Security yet, you generally have to sign up yourself through the Social Security Administration — it won't happen on its own.
Medigap (Medicare Supplement) is private insurance that fills the gaps in Original Medicare — the deductibles and that uncapped 20% coinsurance. It's worth considering if you choose Original Medicare and want protection from large, unpredictable bills. Plans are standardized by letter, so a Plan G from one company covers the same as a Plan G from another; compare on price and service. You don't use Medigap with a Medicare Advantage plan.
Yes, and many who qualify never apply. The Medicare Savings Program can pay your Part B premium, and Extra Help dramatically lowers drug costs. Arizonans with very limited income may also qualify for AHCCCS (Medicaid). A free SHIP counselor at 1-800-432-4040 can screen you for all of these in one call.
Starting in 2025 and continuing in 2026, there's an annual cap on what you pay out of pocket for covered prescriptions. In 2026 that cap is $2,100 — once your covered-drug spending reaches it, you pay $0 for those drugs the rest of the year. You can also use the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan to spread the cost into monthly installments at no extra charge.
Medicare help in other Arizona areas
Compare Sedona Medicare plans today
See the plans available in your ZIP code and enroll online, or get free local counseling first.