The Family Medicare Organizer
One page. One folder. One annual rhythm.
Making room in the years ahead.
Updated annually. Shared with family. Built to outlast a single conversation.
Medicare is the one insurance decision you manage yourself — for the rest of your life.
With employer coverage, HR handled the comparison. With auto and home insurance, you shop every few years with real market signals. With Medicare, the rules are different. There is no HR department. The enrollment windows are permanent — miss one, and the penalty follows you. The plan you choose at 65 may follow you for decades. And most people offering help with Medicare are paid by the plans they recommend. The Clearing is not.
This organizer does not make decisions for you. It gives you — and whoever helps you — a single place to hold the information that matters, updated once a year, accessible when something goes wrong.
There are two ways to use this kit
If you have not yet enrolled in Medicare: Start with the Pre-Enrollment Checklist (Document 2). Use it to understand what decisions are coming and when. Fill in the Snapshot (Document 3) as you enroll.
If you are already enrolled: Start with the Medicare Snapshot (Document 3). Fill it in completely. Update it every October before the Annual Enrollment Period closes on December 7.
For helpers and family members: The Snapshot is the handoff document. If you are helping a parent, spouse, or sibling manage their Medicare, fill this out together. A sibling in another state should be able to pick up this document and know exactly what coverage exists, who the doctors are, and who has permission to help — without calling you first.
Update rhythm
October — Full annual update before AEP closes Dec 7.
Quarterly — 15-minute check for new medications, doctors, or notices.
As needed — Update the Snapshot the same day any coverage change happens.
What this kit is not
This is not a medical record, a financial document, a legal form, or a substitute for professional advice. For Medicare questions, contact your state SHIP (free, plan-neutral, federally funded). For legal authority questions, consult an elder law attorney.
Find your state SHIP
shiphelp.org · Medicare help line: 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227)
Before you enroll: what to understand, what to decide, and when.
Medicare enrollment is not automatic for most people. The decisions you make in your Initial Enrollment Period — the seven-month window around your 65th birthday — affect your coverage and your costs permanently. This checklist helps you understand what is coming before the clock starts.
A — Understand the structure (do this at 62–63)
A note about Plan F:
Plan F is closed to people who became eligible for Medicare on or after January 1, 2020. If you became eligible before that date, you may still be able to enroll in Plan F — but most new enrollees will be choosing between Plan G and Plan N.
B — Gather your information (do this at 63–64)
C — Make your decisions (do this at 64, before your IEP opens)
D — Enroll (your IEP: 3 months before to 3 months after your 65th birthday month)
Find your state SHIP: shiphelp.org · Free, plan-neutral, federally funded.
Fill this in completely. Update every October. Keep one printed copy in your folder and one digital copy in a shared folder your helpers can access. Date every version.
| Medication | Dosage | Frequency | Prescriber | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
PA = Prior Authorization · ST = Step Therapy · QL = Quantity Limit
Medicare: 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) · medicare.gov · Social Security: 1-800-772-1213 · ssa.gov
Annual Enrollment Period: Oct 15 – Dec 7 (every year) · MA Open Enrollment: Jan 1 – Mar 31 (MA enrollees only)
What goes in the folder — and where to find it.
The Snapshot is the index. The folder is everything behind it. Use this checklist to confirm you have the supporting documents. Check each item when filed. Review and update every October.
A — Identity & enrollment
B — Annual plan documents (replace each Oct)
C — Billing & claims (rolling 12 months)
D — Income & IRMAA
E — Legal authority (copies; originals separate)
F — Employer / retiree coverage
G — Active issues (remove when resolved)
Log every call. The reference number is your proof.
When something goes wrong, the call log is your evidence. Date, time, name, reference number, and what was said.
| Date | Time | Called (Medicare / Plan / SSA / SHIP) | Number used | Rep name | Reference / Confirmation # | Issue or question | What was said / resolved | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Print multiple copies as needed.
Key numbers (pre-filled)
Medicare: 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) · Social Security: 1-800-772-1213
If Medicare or your plan denies something, you have the right to appeal. Deadlines are strict.
A denial is not a final answer. Medicare and Medicare Advantage plans must give you a written denial with an explanation and your appeal rights. There are five appeal levels for Original Medicare and a separate process for Medicare Advantage. Missing a deadline can forfeit your right to appeal. Log every denial here immediately.
Key deadlines reference
Original Medicare — Parts A & B
Redetermination (Level 1, MAC): 120 days from MSN receipt · Reconsideration (Level 2, QIC): 180 days from Level 1 · ALJ Hearing (Level 3): 60 days · Appeals Council (Level 4): 60 days · Federal District Court (Level 5): 60 days.
Original Medicare — Part D
Redetermination to plan: 60 days from coverage determination · IRE reconsideration: 60 days from redetermination.
Medicare Advantage
Standard reconsideration of a plan denial: file within 60 days of the denial notice. Plan has 30 days to decide a service request (60 for payment). Expedited: request when delay would seriously jeopardize health — plan decides within 72 hours. Levels 3–5 mirror Original Medicare.
Deadlines verified against Medicare.gov and the canonical Clearing reference at joinclear.ing/learn/medicare-appeal-timeframes. For free help: your state SHIP at shiphelp.org.
| Date of denial | Service / claim denied | Plan or Medicare | Denial reason (from letter) | Appeal level filed | Date filed | Deadline | Outcome | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Attach: Copy of every denial letter · Copy of every appeal filing · Confirmation of receipt.
How to share this with a sibling, spouse, or helper who lives somewhere else.
The Snapshot works on paper. It also works digitally — a shared folder anyone on the helper team can access without calling you. Pick the option that fits how your family already works.
Option A — Shared password manager
Most secure, best if your family already uses one (1Password, Bitwarden, Apple Passwords).
- Create a shared vault named: [Person's name] Medicare
- Invite the helpers who should have access. Each needs their own account in the same manager.
- Add the Snapshot PDF as a secure document or attachment.
- Add logins for Medicare.gov, Social Security, the plan member portal, and the pharmacy.
- Set access levels — most helpers should be Viewer / read-only.
- Update each October — replace the PDF with the new version; don't keep both.
Why it's more secure: passwords aren't stored in plaintext, access is logged, and accounts can be revoked instantly if a helper leaves.
Option B — Google Drive
Most common, works on any device.
- Sign in at drive.google.com (free account).
- Create a folder: [Name] Medicare — [Year]
- Upload the completed Snapshot PDF.
- Folder name → Share → add helpers' emails.
- Set permission to Viewer or Editor; send the link.
- Each October, upload the new version and delete the old.
Option C — iCloud Drive
For Apple households.
- Open Files (iPhone/iPad) or iCloud.com.
- Create a folder: [Name] Medicare — [Year]
- Upload the completed Snapshot PDF.
- Press and hold the folder → Share → add helpers' Apple IDs.
- Set access to View Only or Can Make Changes.
- Update each October.
Option D — Email
Simplest, no account needed.
- Complete the Snapshot PDF on your computer.
- Email it to each helper, subject: [Name] Medicare Snapshot — [Year] — Keep this
- Ask them to save it somewhere they can find it.
- Each October, send an updated version with the new year in the subject.
What NOT to include in a shared digital folder
Passwords in plaintext (use Option A instead) · Full Social Security number (the Snapshot uses the MBI — that's sufficient) · Bank account or credit card numbers · Original legal documents (POA, will) — share copies only; originals stay in a secure physical location.
A note on security: the Snapshot contains personal health information. Share folders only with people on the helper team. Don't post it in group chats or large distribution lists. Enable two-factor authentication on any account you use, and a strong master password on a password manager.