Medicare and Moving in Georgia: How to Change Your Plan When You Relocate

Last Updated June 25, 2026

Medicare and Moving in Georgia: How to Change Your Plan When You Relocate

Moving to Georgia, away from Georgia, or even between counties inside GA can disrupt your Medicare coverage in ways that catch people off guard. The rules depend on which parts of Medicare you have, what kind of plan you're on, and how quickly you let the right people know. Get the timing wrong and you can end up with a coverage gap, a late enrollment penalty, or a plan whose network doesn't reach your new Georgia doctor.

Here's how each piece of Medicare reacts when Georgia residents change addresses, and what to do in the first 60 days after the move.

What Moving Triggers: A Special Enrollment Period

A permanent change of address counts as a qualifying life event under Medicare, which opens a Special Enrollment Period (SEP). This is the window where you're allowed to switch, drop, or pick up certain plans outside of the normal Annual Enrollment Period. Several life events qualify for an SEP, and relocation is one of the most common.

The SEP applies if you're moving to a new address where:

  • Your current plan isn't offered in Georgia or in your new GA county
  • You have new plan options in Georgia that weren't available at your old address
  • You're moving back to the U.S. after living abroad
  • You're moving into, out of, or within a long-term care facility like a skilled nursing home
  • You've been released from incarceration

Not every move opens an SEP. If you're moving to a new address inside the same Georgia county and your plan still covers it, the SEP doesn't kick in. You keep your current coverage and just update your address with Social Security and your insurer.

The Timing Rules That Matter Most

The SEP window depends on when you tell your plan about the move.

If you notify your plan before you move to Georgia: the SEP starts the month before your move and lasts for two full months after the move date.

If you notify your plan after you move: the SEP starts the month you tell them and lasts for two full months. You lose the head start.

"You have 60 days from the time of the move to buy a plan in your new area," says Mark Murphy, a licensed Medicare agent in New Jersey. "If you're sure of your moving date, you can notify them 30 days before and buy a plan in that area within 30 days before moving." That extra runway in front of your Georgia move is the difference between picking a plan calmly and scrambling once your old coverage stops working.

That means the practical window is usually around three months. Procrastinate and you'll shrink it. Missing the SEP entirely can leave Georgia residents waiting until the next Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 to December 7) for changes to take effect January 1, which can be a long time without the right coverage.

What Happens to Each Part of Medicare When You Move

Original Medicare (Parts A and B)

Original Medicare is federal coverage, so it travels with you. Part A and Part B work the same in Georgia as they do in every other state. You can see any doctor or hospital in GA that accepts Medicare assignment, with no network restrictions. The only thing to do is update your address with the Social Security Administration so your Medicare card mail and any premium bills follow you to Georgia. Original Medicare coverage doesn't change based on geography, which is one of its biggest practical advantages for people who relocate.

Medicare Advantage (Part C)

This is where moves get messy. Medicare Advantage plans in Georgia are sold by private insurers and have defined service areas, often as small as a single GA county. If you move outside that service area, your plan can't keep you, and you'll need to pick a new Advantage plan in Georgia, or drop back to Original Medicare and add a standalone Part D plan. Medicare Advantage enrollment timing matters here, so know the rules before the move.

Even moves within Georgia can disqualify your plan. HMO and PPO networks are built around local provider contracts, so a plan that worked in one Georgia metro area may have no in-network doctors a few hundred miles away. Eligibility for a new Advantage plan carries over, but the plan itself rarely does. Always check the plan's GA service area before you assume your coverage carries over.

Medicare Supplement (Medigap)

Medigap plans are standardized federally and work with Original Medicare anywhere in the country, so the plan itself travels with you to Georgia. What Medigap covers doesn't change because of a move. Your premium can change though, since Medigap rates are set by state and by the insurer's local rating method. A Plan G or Plan N that costs one amount in your old state might cost more or less at the same insurer in Georgia.

If you want to switch Medigap plans after moving to Georgia, you generally don't get guaranteed-issue rights just for relocating. You can apply for a new Medigap policy, but most states will require medical underwriting, and the insurer can deny you or charge more based on health. The exception is if you're inside your initial six-month Medigap Open Enrollment Period that started when you first signed up for Part B.

Even when a switch is possible, the price tag can move on you. "It's important to consult with an agent in the state that you're moving to," says Andrew Kelly, a licensed Medicare agent in Washington. "Every state calculates their Medigap premiums differently, and depending on the state you live in, switching might inadvertently lead to higher prices." The same plan letter from the same carrier can come in dramatically different on the Georgia rate sheet.

Part D Prescription Drug Plans

Part D plans also have service areas, usually defined by state or region. Moving to Georgia opens an SEP to pick a new plan. Even if your current plan is offered in Georgia, the formulary, pharmacy network, and premium may all be different, so it's worth reshopping your Part D options rather than assuming it carries over cleanly. Part D enrollment windows are stricter than people expect.

The First 60 Days After a Move to Georgia: A Checklist

  1. Update your address with Social Security. Do this online at ssa.gov or by phone. This is what flows through to Medicare and any IRMAA correspondence.
  2. Call your current Medicare Advantage or Part D plan. Tell them the move date and your new Georgia address. They'll confirm whether you're still in their service area and trigger your SEP if you're not.
  3. Compare plans available at your new Georgia address. Use Medicare's Plan Finder at medicare.gov to see Advantage and Part D plans for your new GA zip code.
  4. Check whether your doctors and pharmacies are in-network. Before enrolling in any new Advantage plan, confirm the specific Georgia providers you want are contracted.
  5. If you have Medigap, decide whether to keep it. Your existing policy still works in Georgia, but compare premiums at insurers in GA in case you can save money by switching, eyes open to underwriting risk.
  6. Talk to a local Georgia agent who knows the new market. Plan selection is very local, and a licensed agent in Georgia can save hours of research and surface options you'd miss on Plan Finder.

One detail agents repeatedly flag: don't assume a same-named plan is the same plan in Georgia. "Make sure that the exact plan you have in your previous state exists in the new state," says Mal Varlack, a licensed Medicare agent in Florida. "For instance, plan number H555-000-009: does that plan exist in your new state with the same carrier? Secondly, check if any benefit changed. Also, in your new state what are the best hospitals, doctors, and specialists in your area." Carrier and plan name can stay identical while the contract ID, benefits, and provider network change underneath you in GA.

Common Mistakes Georgia Movers Make

Assuming Advantage plans travel like Original Medicare. They don't. A move into or out of Georgia can end your coverage on the date your new address takes effect.

Waiting until the next AEP. If you miss the SEP, you may be uncovered or stuck on a plan that has no Georgia network for months.

Forgetting to switch pharmacies. Even when your Part D plan is still valid, your old preferred pharmacy might not have a partner in GA, and out-of-network pharmacy pricing can be brutal.

Confusing a snowbird situation with a permanent move. If you split time between Georgia and another state, you don't qualify for an SEP. You still have one legal address. Original Medicare handles snowbirds well; Advantage plans usually don't. Frequent travelers and snowbirds should think hard about which type of coverage fits before locking in a plan.

"Your Medicare Advantage plan covers you for emergencies and urgent care anywhere in the United States, even if the hospital is out of network," says James Hale, a licensed Medicare agent in Georgia. "Routine care, regular doctor visits, specialists, elective procedures, is usually only covered inside your plan's local service area. For frequent or long-term travel, a plan with strong travel benefits, or pairing Original Medicare with a Medigap Plan G, gives you the most freedom." That's the trap a lot of Georgia snowbirds fall into, assuming the network follows them south or north for the season.

Skipping the IRMAA address update. If your income-based premium adjustments are mailed to the wrong address, you can miss appeal deadlines or premium notices.

Overlooking the Georgia cost difference. Medigap and Advantage prices vary widely by region, and a move to GA can shift your monthly costs in either direction. Run the full out-of-pocket math for Georgia before assuming your old budget still holds.

When the Move Crosses State Lines vs. County Lines

A move into Georgia from another state almost always changes your Advantage and Part D options. A cross-county move within GA often does too, since Advantage service areas are drawn at the county level. Even if you stay in the same Georgia metro region, a plan that was available in your old zip code may not be sold in the new one.

"Every Medicare Advantage plan has a service area that is based on counties," says Brent Minter, a licensed Medicare agent in South Carolina. "Sometimes the service area for a plan can be as small as one county, and other times a service area may span counties in multiple states. When you move, it is always a good idea to make sure your new county is in your plan's service area. Even if your current plan is available in your new county, it is still a good idea to review your coverage as additional plans may be available that fit your needs better." That second piece matters in Georgia too: a county move can unlock plan options the old address didn't have.

Original Medicare and Medigap don't care about Georgia county or state lines for coverage purposes, but a state change can shift your Medigap premium, your state-specific consumer protections (like birthday or anniversary rules for switching between Medigap plans), and the out-of-pocket costs you'll see locally in GA.

Moving Into a Skilled Nursing Facility

If you're moving into, out of, or between long-term care facilities in Georgia, you get a continuous SEP. You can change plans once per calendar month while you're institutionalized, and once in the two months after you leave. This recognizes that care needs and plan fit change quickly in this kind of setting. Special Needs Plans are sometimes the right fit for long-term care residents in GA.

Bottom Line for Georgia Residents

Original Medicare and Medigap move with you. Medicare Advantage and Part D often don't. The SEP gives you a runway to react, but it's tighter than people think, and the cleanest version of it requires telling your plan before you go. Notify Social Security and your insurer, compare new plans for your new Georgia zip code, and confirm your doctors and prescriptions before you commit. A 20-minute call now saves a six-month coverage headache later for new GA residents.

Moving With Medicare: What Travels, What Doesn't A quick guide for Georgia residents A/B Original Medicare Travels nationwide. Update your SSA address and you're set. No network. No service area. Works the same in every state. MA Medicare Advantage Tied to local service areas. Move outside it and your plan ends. SEP opens. Pick a new plan or switch to Original Medicare. Med Medigap (Supplement) Plan travels. Premium may change with your new state. Switching plans usually requires medical underwriting. D Part D (Prescription Drugs) Regional service areas. SEP opens to pick a new plan. Reshop the formulary and pharmacy network in GA. MedicareSignups.com