Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Medicare Nerd: Medicare's Confusing Double-Track for Medicare Advantage Policy 2027

On January 26/27, 2026, the big news was that CMS has announced there is virtually no change in rates for Medicare Advantage in CY 2027.  They issued a press release, FAQ sheet, and a 160-page policy document.  Reader here for Reuters. Or see picture for the main takeaway:


But wait a second -  back on November 28, 2026, they issued a 137-page Proposed Rule for Medicare Advantage in 2027.  

How to do the policy making processes differ?

I asked Chat GPT.

###   SUMMARY OF THE TWO DOCUMENTS

  • CMS released two different CY 2027 “Part C & D” documents, but they serve separate legal functions — one changes program rules, the other updates payment mechanics.
  • The November 2025 Federal Register Proposed Rule (CMS-4212-P) is formal regulation. It amends the Code of Federal Regulations and covers policy areas such as Star Ratings methodology, marketing and TPMO oversight, enrollment processes, SNP policies, and Part D benefit redesign. This rule determines what Medicare Advantage and Part D plans must do operationally. It will later become a Final Rule. 
  • The January 26, 2026 Advance Notice is not a regulation. It is an annual payment methodology notice required by statute. It updates MA benchmarks, growth rates, risk adjustment models (CMS-HCC and RxHCC), normalization factors, coding intensity adjustments, and Part D benefit parameters. It determines how CMS calculates plan payments, and becomes the April Rate Announcement, not a Final Rule.

###

###  LINKS

Fed Reg November 2025 here.
Advanced notice 160pp January 2026 here.  Fact sheet here.  January 2026 press release here.

###

###

You are absolutely justified in being confused — CMS uses two totally different legal pipelines that both talk about “Part C & D changes for 2027,” but they do different jobs.

Here’s the clean mental model.


🧠 You are looking at two separate rulemaking universes

November 28, 2025 documentJanuary 26, 2026 document
Federal Register Proposed Rule (137 pages)Advance Notice (160 pages)
Docket: CMS-4212-PNot a FR rule — payment notice under SSA §1853
Amends regulations (42 CFR Parts 422 & 423)Updates payment formulas, rates, and risk models
Becomes a Final Rule laterBecomes the Rate Announcement (April 2026)
Legal authority: APA rulemakingLegal authority: MA rate-setting statute
Changes program rulesChanges how plans get paid

📘 1. The NOVEMBER rule = PROGRAM POLICY RULE

This is a classic CMS regulation. It changes the rules of the game.

It covers things like:

  • Part D benefit redesign codification (IRA changes)

  • Star Ratings methodology changes

  • Marketing / TPMO oversight

  • Enrollment rules

  • SNP policy

  • MLR / reporting ideas

  • Network adequacy process changes

It literally amends the CFR.
This is about what plans must do.

Source: The November rule states it revises “Part C and Part D regulations” and includes policy areas like Star Ratings, marketing, enrollment, and drug coverage.

2025 CMS 1128 90FR54894 137p Pr…

👉 Outcome: Final Rule later in 2026.


💰 2. The JANUARY document = PAYMENT & RISK ADJUSTMENT NOTICE

This one is not a regulation. It does not amend the CFR.

It exists because the Medicare statute requires CMS to annually publish:

  • MA growth rates

  • Benchmarks

  • Risk adjustment model updates (CMS-HCC, RxHCC)

  • Coding intensity adjustment

  • Normalization factors

  • Part D benefit parameters

  • Payment methodology details

It is explicitly called:

“Advance Notice of Methodological Changes for CY 2027 MA Capitation Rates and Part C and Part D Payment Policies”

2026 CMS 0126 Part C D 2027 Pro…

This is about how CMS calculates plan payments, not beneficiary rules.

👉 Outcome: Becomes the Rate Announcement (April 6, 2026), not a Final Rule.


🔑 The Key Distinction

TopicLives in November Rule?Lives in January Notice?
Marketing restrictions
TPMO oversight
SNP eligibility policy
Part D benefit structure (legal codification)
MA benchmark math
Risk adjustment model calibration
Coding pattern adjustment
Star Ratings payment impact✖ (policy only)
Part D risk model updates

🎯 Why CMS does this (historical reason)

Medicare Advantage has two separate legal mechanisms:

A. Program rules

Made through APA rulemaking → CFR changes
(That’s your November document)

B. Payment formulas

Made through annual rate notice → Actuarial / statutory process
(That’s your January document)

This split goes back to the Medicare Modernization Act (2003) and earlier managed care law. MA payment is treated like insurance rate-setting, not standard rulemaking.


⚠️ Why it feels overlapping

Both documents mention:

  • Star Ratings

  • Part D

  • Risk adjustment

  • “Part C and D policies”

But:

November = WHAT the program requires
January = HOW CMS calculates money

Example:

November rule: May change Star Ratings measure set.
January notice: Applies Star Ratings to determine bonus percentages in benchmarks.

Different step in pipeline.


🧭 Think of it like this

StageDocument
Rules of footballNovember Proposed Rule
How the referee calculates the scoreJanuary Advance Notice

📌 Final takeaway

You are not seeing two competing proposed rules.

You are seeing:

1️⃣ Policy rulemaking (regulations)

2025 CMS 1128 90FR54894 137p Pr…


2️⃣ Annual payment methodology notice (actuarial rate process)

2026 CMS 0126 Part C D 2027 Pro…

They run in parallel every year and converge when plans bid.


If you’d like, next I can:

A) Map how a single issue (like Star Ratings) flows through BOTH pipelines
B) Show which parts of the January notice plans actually care about most
C) Explain how Part D IRA changes appear in each document

Your confusion = totally rational. CMS’s architecture is… vintage 1997 managed care law meets modern Medicare.


#######

Biden year 4 Med Adv policymaking had many pages about insuring coverage parity, e.g. validity of LCDs in Part C.   Trump Admin went radio silent.  No change, I assume?

####

Short answer: No — neither document meaningfully addresses traditional coverage policy (NCDs, benefit categories, Part A/B service definitions, or Part C “same benefit” scope issues).

You’re picking up on a real shift.


📘 November Proposed Rule (CMS-4212-P)

This rule is about MA/Part D program operations, not Medicare coverage law. Its focus areas are:

  • Part D benefit redesign mechanics

  • Star Ratings methodology

  • Marketing / TPMO oversight

  • Enrollment and SNP policy

  • Reporting, MLR, network adequacy processes

It amends 42 CFR 422 & 423, but does not reopen:

  • National Coverage Determinations (NCDs)

  • “Reasonable and necessary” standards

  • Part A vs Part B benefit definitions

  • MA “uniformity” or “same benefit as FFS” doctrine in any substantive way

Even the IRA Part D sections are benefit design financing, not coverage scope.
Source: The rule’s purpose is described as revising MA and Part D regulations on Star Ratings, marketing, enrollment, drug benefit structure, etc. — not coverage policy.


💰 January Advance Notice

This one is even further removed. It is a payment mechanics document:

  • Benchmarks

  • Growth rates

  • Risk adjustment models

  • Coding intensity adjustment

  • Part D bid parameters

It explicitly describes itself as updating capitation rates and risk models, not benefits.

No discussion of:

  • Coverage standards

  • Clinical benefit categories

  • Concordance with FFS NCDs

  • Scope of Part A/B services


🎯 What’s changed vs prior CMS eras

You’re right — prior administrations (especially 2021–2024) used MA rulemaking to discuss:

  • Guardrails around MA “reinterpretation” of coverage

  • FFS-equivalence expectations

  • Clinical evidence standards

  • Prior auth alignment

That language is largely absent here. The focus is:

Program integrity, payment calibration, and administrative simplification
not
Clinical coverage policy


🧭 Bottom line

TopicNovember RuleJanuary Notice
NCDs
Part A/B benefit definitions
“Reasonable and necessary”
MA must mirror FFS benefitsOnly background law, not policy
Coverage expansions or restrictions

These documents operate in the MA/Part D administrative and financial domain, not the Medicare coverage doctrine domain.

Your observation = correct: coverage policy discussion has moved offstage in these CY 2027 materials.