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Medicare Advantage Hearing Aid Coverage: Comparing Humana, AARP, and UnitedHealthcare Plans

If you're on Medicare and trying to figure out how to get help paying for hearing aids, the most important thing to know upfront is this: Humana, AARP/UnitedHealthcare, and Aetna Medicare Advantage plans are among the most common ways seniors actually get hearing coverage — and the differences between them matter a lot when it comes to out-of-pocket costs.

Original Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover hearing aids. But many Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans do — through annual allowances, set copays, or vendor networks. This guide compares the major plans, explains what state assistance programs are available if you don't qualify, and walks you through the exact steps to get covered.

Does Original Medicare cover hearing aids?

No. Original Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover hearing aids, routine hearing exams, or fittings — even when a doctor recommends them. Medicare.gov confirms that hearing aids are excluded from standard Part B coverage.

There are two exceptions worth knowing: Medicare Part B does cover diagnostic hearing and balance exams when ordered by a doctor to diagnose a medical condition (not to fit a hearing aid). And cochlear implants, when medically necessary, may be covered as a prosthetic device. For standard hearing aids, however, you'll need a Medicare Advantage plan or another source of assistance.

AARP hearing aid coverage through UnitedHealthcare Medicare Advantage

AARP Medicare Advantage plans are underwritten by UnitedHealthcare and are among the most widely available plans with hearing benefits. AARP/UnitedHealthcare partners with HearUSA and a network of licensed audiologists to provide hearing services for eligible members.

Depending on the plan and your location, AARP Medicare Advantage hearing benefits may include:

  • An annual or biennial allowance toward hearing aids (commonly $500 to $1,500 per ear)
  • Covered routine hearing exams through network audiologists
  • Access to hearing aids from multiple brands at set copays
  • Follow-up fitting and adjustment visits

To check your specific AARP/UnitedHealthcare plan's hearing benefit, call the member services number on your card or review your Evidence of Coverage. Key questions to ask: What is the allowance per ear? How often can I replace hearing aids? Which local audiologists are in-network?

Humana Medicare Advantage hearing coverage

Humana offers several Medicare Advantage plan types — including Humana Gold Plus HMO, Humana Choice PPO, and Special Needs Plans — many of which include hearing benefits as part of a broader supplemental package.

Humana's hearing benefits typically work through one of two structures:

  • Allowance model: A fixed dollar amount (for example, $500–$2,000 per ear annually or every two years) that applies toward devices from approved vendors
  • Copay model: You pay a set copay for a standard or premium device rather than tracking against an allowance

Humana plans in many markets also include access to an over-the-counter (OTC) benefit card that can be used for certain hearing-related supplies. If you are a dual-eligible member (enrolled in both Medicare and Medicaid), Humana's Special Needs Plans may offer enhanced hearing coverage that goes beyond standard Medicare Advantage benefits.

To confirm your Humana plan's hearing benefit, call 1-800-4HUMANA or log into your MyHumana account and review your plan's Summary of Benefits under the hearing services section.

Aetna Medicare Advantage hearing aid benefits

Aetna Medicare Advantage plans frequently include hearing benefits through their supplemental coverage programs. Aetna partners with hearing aid vendors to provide network pricing and, on many plans, an annual allowance toward devices.

If you have an Aetna Medicare Advantage plan, check your Evidence of Coverage document for the "Hearing Services" section, or call the number on your insurance card and ask: Does my plan include a hearing aid allowance? What brands are available? Do I need a referral or prior authorization?

How to compare Medicare Advantage plans for hearing coverage

Not every Medicare Advantage plan in your area will include meaningful hearing benefits. The benefit amount, covered brands, and network requirements vary significantly — even among plans offered by the same insurer in different counties. Here is how to compare effectively:

  1. Use Medicare's Plan Finder. Go to Medicare.gov Plan Compare and enter your ZIP code. Under each plan, look at the "Extra Benefits" section and specifically search for hearing aid allowances and annual maximums.
  2. Compare allowance amounts per ear. A plan with a $1,500 per-ear allowance every 24 months is meaningfully better than a $500 allowance, especially for premium hearing aids that run $2,000–$4,000 per pair.
  3. Check the vendor network. Some plans require you to use specific vendors (for example, HearUSA or NationsHearing). Others allow you to visit any licensed audiologist in-network. Out-of-network purchases often aren't covered.
  4. Ask about prior authorization. Some plans require prior authorization before you can order hearing aids. Know the process before you schedule an appointment.
  5. Review the enrollment window. You can switch Medicare Advantage plans during the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 – December 7) or the Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period (January 1 – March 31).

State hearing aid assistance programs — Florida, Texas, Michigan, and others

If you don't have a Medicare Advantage plan with hearing benefits — or if you need help beyond what your plan covers — several states have dedicated hearing aid assistance programs for seniors and low-income adults.

Florida hearing aid assistance

Florida's Division of Vocational Rehabilitation and the Florida Department of Health offer programs that may assist seniors with hearing aid costs when work, employment, or quality of life is affected. Additionally, Florida Medicaid covers hearing services for eligible dual-eligible members. Contact your local Florida Medicaid managed care plan to ask specifically about hearing aid coverage for adults.

Texas hearing aid assistance

Texas Health and Human Services administers Medicaid hearing benefits for eligible adults. Texas also has a Hearing Aid Assistance Program through the Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services for individuals with hearing loss that affects employment. Income and eligibility requirements apply.

Michigan hearing aid assistance

Michigan Medicaid covers hearing aids for eligible adults, including fitting and follow-up services. Contact your local Michigan Medicaid managed care plan for coverage details. Michigan also has a Community Mental Health network that may assist seniors with hearing-related quality-of-life needs.

Other state resources

To check your state's Medicaid hearing aid coverage for adults, use the KFF State-by-State Medicaid Hearing Services Tracker, which shows which states cover hearing aids for adults and the extent of that coverage.

What if you can't afford hearing aids even with insurance?

If your Medicare Advantage plan has a gap in coverage or if you're on Original Medicare with no supplemental plan, there are several practical options:

  • FDA-approved OTC hearing aids: Since 2022, adults with perceived mild to moderate hearing loss can buy over-the-counter hearing aids without a prescription at pharmacies and online retailers. Prices typically range from a few hundred to around $1,500 per pair — far less than prescription alternatives.
  • Veterans' benefits: If you're eligible for VA health care, the VA provides hearing aids and related services at little or no cost for qualifying veterans.
  • Nonprofit programs: The Hearing Aid Project (part of Hearing Charities of America) refurbishes and donates hearing aids to applicants who qualify based on financial need. Local Lions Clubs chapters also run hearing assistance programs in many communities.
  • University audiology clinics: Audiology graduate programs at many universities provide lower-cost fittings and devices as part of supervised clinical training.
  • HSA/FSA funds: Hearing aids are an eligible expense under Health Savings Accounts and Flexible Spending Accounts. If you have existing HSA funds, you can use them tax-free — though new HSA contributions stop once you enroll in Medicare.

How to get hearing aids through your Medicare Advantage plan — step by step

  1. Confirm your plan's hearing benefit. Call member services or review your Evidence of Coverage. Note the allowance amount, approved vendors, prior authorization requirements, and how often you can access the benefit.
  2. Get a diagnostic hearing evaluation. Visit a licensed audiologist — ideally one in your plan's network — for a comprehensive hearing test. This establishes your degree of hearing loss and the type of devices appropriate for your situation.
  3. Ask your doctor to document medical necessity if needed. Some plans, particularly those with Medicaid coordination, require documentation of the medical need for hearing aids.
  4. Select devices from your plan's approved list. Ask the audiologist for both bundled and unbundled pricing: the device cost separately from the fitting and follow-up services. This lets you compare true costs across vendors.
  5. Complete prior authorization if required. Your audiologist or vendor typically handles this, but confirm it's in place before ordering to avoid a denied claim.
  6. Schedule the fitting and real-ear verification. Proper fitting and verification adjustments are essential for hearing aids to work well. Confirm these visits are covered or factored into the cost estimate.
  7. Note your replacement timeline. Most plans allow replacement every one to three years. Set a calendar reminder so you don't leave unused benefits on the table.

Common questions about Medicare and hearing aids

If I have Medicare A and B, do I need a different plan to get hearing aid coverage?

Yes. Original Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover hearing aids. To get coverage, you would need to switch to a Medicare Advantage (Part C) plan that includes hearing benefits, or access state Medicaid assistance if you qualify. You can compare plans and enroll during the Annual Enrollment Period (October 15 – December 7) at Medicare.gov Plan Compare.

Do AARP hearing aids work better than other Medicare Advantage options?

AARP/UnitedHealthcare plans offer a broad network through HearUSA and tend to cover a wide range of device brands and technology levels. Whether they're the best option depends on your location, your specific plan's allowance, and which audiologists are available in your network. Comparing two or three plans side by side during open enrollment is the most reliable way to find the best value.

Can I get free hearing aids through Medicare?

Completely free hearing aids through Medicare Advantage are rare, but some plans have $0-copay options for entry-level devices. More commonly, a plan covers a significant portion — $500 to $2,000 per ear — and you pay the remainder. The total out-of-pocket cost depends on your specific plan and the devices you choose.

What is an audiologist Medicare coverage benefit?

Original Medicare Part B covers diagnostic hearing and balance exams ordered by a physician — you pay 20% coinsurance after the Part B deductible. Many Medicare Advantage plans go further, covering routine hearing exams and audiologist visits for fitting and follow-up as part of their supplemental hearing benefit.

Next steps

  1. Use Medicare Plan Compare to search for Humana, AARP/UnitedHealthcare, and Aetna plans in your ZIP code and compare their hearing aid allowances.
  2. Call your current plan's member services line and ask the specific questions above — allowance amount, approved vendors, and prior authorization requirements.
  3. If you don't qualify for Medicare Advantage hearing benefits, check your state's Medicaid program or the KFF state tracker for adult hearing aid coverage.
  4. Consider OTC hearing aids as a bridge option while you evaluate plan changes during the next open enrollment period.

Coverage details, plan benefits, and allowance amounts change annually. Always verify current benefits directly with your insurer, your state's Medicaid program, and your audiologist before scheduling a fitting or purchasing devices.

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