
Does Medicare Cover Insulin in Kansas? The $35 Monthly Cap Explained
Yes, Medicare covers insulin for Kansas residents, and thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act, most people on Medicare now pay no more than $35 for a one-month supply of a covered insulin product. The cap applies whether you are in your deductible, initial coverage, or catastrophic phase. But there are real limits to how the $35 cap works, and the fine print matters if your specific insulin isn't on your Kansas Part D plan's formulary.
Here is what actually determines what Kansas enrollees pay, how the Part B side of insulin coverage works for pump users, and how to make sure the Part D plan you pick during Annual Enrollment covers the product you already use.
Summary for Kansas residents: (1) $35 monthly cap per covered insulin, (2) no Part D deductible on insulin, (3) the cap only applies to insulins on your KS plan's formulary, and (4) insulin used in a pump is billed under Part B with the same $35 cap.
The Short Answer for Kansas Residents
If your insulin is on your Kansas Part D plan's formulary, you'll pay $35 or less for a 30-day supply. That's a hard cap that applies across every phase of your drug coverage for the year, no matter which KS plan you're enrolled in.
The same $35 cap also applies to insulin used in a traditional pump, which is billed under Part B rather than Part D. So whether you inject with a pen or use a pump, the ceiling is the same for Kansas enrollees.
How the $35 Cap Actually Works
The Inflation Reduction Act rewrote the rules for insulin cost sharing on Medicare. Since 2023, and unchanged for 2026, every Part D plan sold in Kansas is required to cover at least one insulin product in each dosage form (vial, pen) and each insulin type (rapid-acting, short-acting, intermediate-acting, long-acting, and pre-mixed).
For any covered product, the plan is prohibited from charging more than $35 for a one-month supply. There's also no Part D deductible on insulin, which used to be a hidden cost — you'd hit a Part D deductible of several hundred dollars before your copay dropped.
To put the change in perspective, before the cap took effect many Kansas enrollees were paying $150 to $400 a month out of pocket for a single insulin, especially brand-name analogs like Lantus, Humalog, or Novolog. Today the ceiling on a covered insulin is $35 flat.
What the $35 cap does not do is force every Kansas plan to cover every insulin. Which brings us to the piece most people miss.
When Your Specific Insulin Isn't on the Formulary
Every Part D plan has a formulary — the list of drugs it covers. Plans change formularies every year. An insulin that was on your Kansas plan's list in January can be dropped, moved to a different tier, or replaced with a competitor's product for the following plan year.
If your specific insulin isn't on your plan's formulary, the $35 cap doesn't help you. You're either paying full retail price or you're switching to a covered alternative during the Part D enrollment period.
"It's a good idea to review your Part D coverage every year with a licensed broker for this reason," says Angela Ellington, a licensed Medicare agent in Fontana, California. "Formulary-covered insulins are capped at $35, but it's possible that the brand you use is no longer on your Part D formulary. The Inflation Reduction Act created a $2,000 catastrophic limit, but if your drug is not on the formulary, it won't count toward that calculation either."
That's the part that catches people off guard. The $2,000 annual out-of-pocket cap on Part D only applies to what you spend on covered drugs. A non-formulary insulin doesn't count toward it, and there's no ceiling on what you pay. This is also why the old donut hole coverage gap isn't quite the concern it used to be — the phase structure changed, but formulary risk didn't go away.
Formulary status isn't the only thing that shifts between Kansas plans. Coverage rules do too. "Every Part D plan has its own specific formulary drug list, and different rules," says Mark Boone, a licensed Medicare agent in Rochester, Minnesota. "A drug that didn't require prior authorization under your old plan might have different coverage rules under a new one, thus the need for a prior authorization." So even if your insulin technically stays covered when you switch to a new KS plan, you may end up waiting on paperwork before your first fill goes through.
Part B vs. Part D: Which Covers Your Insulin?
This trips up a lot of Kansas enrollees. The route your insulin travels depends on how you take it:
- Insulin pens and vials for self-injection — covered under Medicare Part D. This is where most insulin users in KS get their coverage.
- Insulin used in a traditional insulin pump (DME) — covered under Medicare Part B as durable medical equipment. Same $35 cap, but billed through your Part B benefit.
- Insulin administered in a hospital or provider's office — covered under Part B for that specific administration.
"Medicare can cover wearable medical devices for chronic conditions," says Sam Silva, a licensed Medicare agent in West Palm Beach, Florida. "Insulin pumps are covered under Part B if medically necessary for managing diabetes. You may need to meet specific criteria, and coverage can depend on the device's use and how it's prescribed." In practice that means your doctor's documentation matters just as much as your Kansas plan choice when a pump is involved.
If you have Original Medicare plus a Medigap plan in Kansas, your Part B insulin pump costs may be partially or fully covered by your supplement after Medicare's share. If you're on a Kansas Medicare Advantage plan, the Part B insulin still runs through your plan's Part B benefit rules.
What About Diabetes Supplies?
Insulin is only part of the picture for Kansas diabetes patients. Supplies fall in a few different places depending on what you use:
- Continuous glucose monitors (CGMs), test strips, lancets, and blood glucose meters — covered under Part B as durable medical equipment when you meet medical necessity requirements.
- Syringes, pen needles, alcohol swabs, and gauze — covered under Part D if you get your insulin under Part D.
- Insulin pump supplies — covered under Part B along with the pump itself.
"Medicare may cover a continuous glucose monitor and related supplies if you have diabetes, your doctor prescribes it, and you meet certain medical requirements," says Mary Brown, a licensed Medicare agent in Somerset, New Jersey. "Under Part B, you would typically pay 20% after the deductible unless you have additional coverage."
That 20% Part B coinsurance is where a lot of Kansas diabetes patients end up with unexpected costs on CGMs. A Medigap plan usually picks it up. Some Kansas Medicare Advantage plans include CGMs as a supplemental benefit, but you should confirm the specific device you use is covered before enrolling. Preventive services like diabetes screenings and self-management training are also fully covered under Part B for KS residents.
CGM coverage itself took a long time to arrive. "Medicare tends to take a slow, cautious approach to new technologies of all kinds," says Don Golding, a licensed Medicare agent in Sugar Land, Texas. "A good example is the adoption of continuous glucose monitors. It took several years for Medicare to cover these devices, but now they are widely used and covered in most Medicare plans." Expect the same pattern with newer diabetes tech in Kansas — the first year or two of a device on the market is usually the hardest for coverage.
How to Pick a Kansas Part D Plan If You Take Insulin
The $35 cap makes plan selection more forgiving than it used to be, but the wrong plan can still cost Kansas enrollees real money. A few things to check every year during the fall Annual Enrollment Period:
- Look up your specific insulin on the plan's formulary. Not just "insulin" — the exact brand and dosage form. Plans list them by name.
- Check which pharmacies the plan considers preferred in your part of Kansas. Non-preferred pharmacies can charge different amounts even for capped drugs.
- Review all your other prescriptions. The $35 cap only helps with insulin. Everything else runs on normal Part D tier pricing — see our guide on finding the right Part D plan.
- Watch for prior authorization or step therapy. Even a covered insulin can require paperwork before the plan approves the first fill.
- Confirm you can still enroll on time. Missing your window can trigger a Part D late enrollment penalty that follows you for life.
The Medicare Plan Finder at medicare.gov lets you enter your medications and see estimated annual costs across every Kansas plan in your area. If you'd rather not do it yourself, comparing Part D plans with a local KS licensed agent is free and usually the fastest way to see all your options side by side. Confirm you're eligible for Part D first — most people are, but the details matter if you're new to Medicare or reviewing what Part D covers for the first time.
Help for Lower-Income Kansas Enrollees
If your income is limited, you may qualify for Extra Help (also called the Low Income Subsidy), which drops your insulin copay well below $35 and covers most other drug costs too. As of 2024, the program expanded so that anyone up to 150% of the federal poverty level gets the full subsidy — no partial-benefit tier anymore. Kansas residents who were denied in past years should re-check eligibility.
Extra Help usually isn't the only program in play. "There are several programs designed specifically for people with limited income to help with Medicare premiums and other costs," says Chad Smith, a licensed Medicare agent in Lexington, Kentucky. "The main ones are the Medicare Savings Programs, administered through Medicaid, plus the Extra Help program for prescription drugs." In Kansas, the MSPs handle Part B premiums and, at higher tiers, Part A and cost-sharing too — so stacking MSP eligibility with Extra Help can knock a serious chunk out of your total Medicare costs before you even factor in the insulin cap.
Also worth knowing: if you can't afford large insulin costs concentrated at the start of the year, the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan lets you spread your out-of-pocket drug costs across monthly installments instead of paying them at the pharmacy counter. Your state may also run Medicare Savings Programs that help with Part B and Part D premiums.
Bottom Line for Kansas
Medicare covers insulin for Kansas residents, and the $35 monthly cap is real. The catch is that it only applies to insulins your plan actually lists on its formulary, and plans change those lists every year. Insurance companies release their official 2027 plan formularies around October 1, so once Annual Enrollment opens on October 15, pull up your KS Part D plan's 2027 formulary and confirm your specific insulin is still on it before enrollment closes December 7. If it's not, this is the year to switch — because the cap doesn't do you any good if your product isn't covered.




