February 2026

Released February 27, 2026

Download PDF for New York


$800.3M
Excess Part B premiums
4th in the U.S.
$617.7M
Total burden on individuals
4th in the U.S.
$335.0M
Excess TM premiums
4th in the U.S.
$86.7M
State fiscal burden
2nd in the U.S.
$95.9M
Federal fiscal burden
3rd in the U.S.
$182.5M
Total public sector fiscal burden
2nd in the U.S.



About this data update


This monthly update reports the Joint Economic Committee’s latest estimates of excess Part B premiums attributable to Medicare Advantage (MA) overpayments for New York and its congressional districts.


By law, Medicare Part B premiums are set to finance 25 percent of projected Part B spending, with some paying additional premiums based on income. This financing design means that 25 percent of any increase in Part B spending is automatically passed through to enrollees as higher Part B premiums. These premiums apply equally to beneficiaries regardless of whether they enroll in Traditional Medicare or MA. Because payments to MA plans are financed through Part B, it costs more to cover enrollees in MA than to cover those in Traditional Medicare, which increases total Part B spending and mechanically raises Part B premiums for beneficiaries nationwide, including in Traditional Medicare.


While the premium increase applies uniformly, the resulting dollar burden varies across states, congressional districts, and individuals based on beneficiary income (income-related premiums, or IRMAA), the share of beneficiaries with publicly subsidized premiums, and local Medicare enrollment levels.


The Joint Economic Committee’s forthcoming issue brief documents this mechanism in detail and estimates that MA overpayments increased Part B premiums by over $13 billion nationally in 2025. This data update quantifies that burden for seniors in New York both for individuals through greater Social Security deductions and for the public collectively through higher state Medicaid expenditures, which are financed by state tax revenues.



Distribution of the excess Part B premium burden as of November 2025


This section decomposes the total excess Part B premium amount as of November 2025 into mutually exclusive components based on who ultimately bears its burden. We begin with the gross excess premium increase, before offsets and irrespective of who pays. We then separate the premium liability borne directly by beneficiaries from premiums financed through Medicaid and other public subsidy mechanisms.



$800,273,011
Excess Part B premiums in New York
Gross premium increase, before offsets, irrespective of who pays


$617,725,897
Total burden on individuals
Premium increases faced by beneficiaries, typically deducted from Social Security checks


$182,547,114
Total public sector fiscal burden
Premiums financed through Medicaid and other public subsidy mechanisms, creating fiscal pressure on state and federal budgets


$86,656,933
State fiscal burden


$95,890,181
Federal fiscal burden



Consequences of Medicare Advantage overpayments for Traditional Medicare beneficiaries


The effect of Medicare Advantage (MA) overpayments on Part B premiums is uniform whether a beneficiary enrolls in Traditional Medicare or MA. However, MA overpayments help finance more generous MA benefits that are not available in Traditional Medicare. This includes Part B premium “givebacks,” under which an MA plan pays some or all of the Part B premium on behalf of its enrollees.


As a result, redistribution flows from Traditional Medicare to MA. In New York, there are 7.2 Traditional Medicare beneficiaries bearing this higher premium burden for every 10 MA beneficiaries who ultimately receive the greater benefits. This means that 0.7 Traditional Medicare beneficiaries pay $156 in excess for each MA beneficiary in New York.



$335,025,876
Excess TM premiums
Excess Part B premiums faced by Traditional Medicare enrollees despite not receiving Medicare Advantage benefits


$156
Amount paid in excess by TM beneficiaries for every MA beneficiary
Excess Part B premiums faced by Traditional Medicare enrollees for each MA beneficiary

7.2
Number of TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries



Distribution across congressional districts in New York


Medicare enrollment, Medicare Advantage penetration, and income distributions vary across states and congressional districts, leading to substantial variation in the excess Part B premium burden.



Summary of methodology

To quantify the excess premium burden borne by constituents in each congressional district, we crosswalk local enrollment patterns from monthly CMS enrollment files at the county level to congressional districts using Census population weights. Our results reflect gross premium liability; for some MA enrollees, the net out-of-pocket effect may be lower when Part B premiums are fully or partially covered by the plan as a supplemental benefit.

In 2022, the U.S. Census Bureau adopted Connecticut’s nine new planning regions, which replaced its eight counties. As a result, the JEC was unable to include Connecticut in the district-level analysis. Therefore, the total number of districts included is 431, including DC’s at-large district and excluding Connecticut’s five districts.

Full methodology, assumptions, and national estimates are provided in the forthcoming JEC issue brief.




Congressional District 1

Rep. Nick LaLota (R)

$37,921,078
Total excess Part B premium burden
44th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$33.6M
Total burden on individuals
$25.1M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
19.6
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 2

Rep. Andrew R. Garbarino (R)

$28,259,117
Total excess Part B premium burden
286th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$24.7M
Total burden on individuals
$18.6M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
19.3
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 3

Rep. Thomas R. Suozzi (D)

$40,404,766
Total excess Part B premium burden
24th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$34.4M
Total burden on individuals
$23.4M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
13.8
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 4

Rep. Laura Gillen (D)

$30,383,825
Total excess Part B premium burden
218th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$26.7M
Total burden on individuals
$19.0M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
16.6
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 5

Rep. Gregory W. Meeks (D)

$30,681,031
Total excess Part B premium burden
209th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$20.2M
Total burden on individuals
$10.2M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
5.0
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 6

Rep. Grace Meng (D)

$31,375,616
Total excess Part B premium burden
177th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$20.3M
Total burden on individuals
$10.5M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
5.0
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 7

Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez (D)

$19,744,217
Total excess Part B premium burden
420th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$12.0M
Total burden on individuals
$7.0M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
5.5
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 8

Rep. Hakeem S. Jeffries (D)

$30,227,579
Total excess Part B premium burden
222nd out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$17.9M
Total burden on individuals
$11.3M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
6.0
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 9

Rep. Yvette D. Clarke (D)

$24,801,673
Total excess Part B premium burden
356th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$14.6M
Total burden on individuals
$9.3M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
6.0
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 10

Rep. Daniel S. Goldman (D)

$24,724,688
Total excess Part B premium burden
359th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$16.8M
Total burden on individuals
$10.6M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
7.5
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 11

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R)

$29,591,981
Total excess Part B premium burden
244th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$22.6M
Total burden on individuals
$13.9M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
8.9
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 12

Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D)

$34,423,260
Total excess Part B premium burden
105th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$25.3M
Total burden on individuals
$16.2M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
8.9
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 13

Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D)

$26,500,741
Total excess Part B premium burden
325th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$16.9M
Total burden on individuals
$10.6M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
6.7
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 14

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D)

$22,323,380
Total excess Part B premium burden
396th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$12.9M
Total burden on individuals
$6.0M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
3.7
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 15

Rep. Ritchie Torres (D)

$24,902,029
Total excess Part B premium burden
354th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$13.9M
Total burden on individuals
$5.8M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
3.1
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 16

Rep. George Latimer (D)

$30,795,103
Total excess Part B premium burden
203rd out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$26.1M
Total burden on individuals
$16.5M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
11.6
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 17

Rep. Michael Lawler (R)

$33,117,263
Total excess Part B premium burden
132nd out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$29.3M
Total burden on individuals
$19.9M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
15.0
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 18

Rep. Patrick Ryan (D)

$29,512,898
Total excess Part B premium burden
245th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$25.3M
Total burden on individuals
$16.5M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
12.7
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 19

Rep. Josh Riley (D)

$35,447,111
Total excess Part B premium burden
78th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$29.1M
Total burden on individuals
$16.3M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
8.6
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 20

Rep. Paul Tonko (D)

$31,596,251
Total excess Part B premium burden
173rd out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$26.7M
Total burden on individuals
$11.0M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
5.3
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 21

Rep. Elise M. Stefanik (R)

$35,210,351
Total excess Part B premium burden
84th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$28.7M
Total burden on individuals
$15.3M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
7.7
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 22

Rep. John W. Mannion (D)

$32,398,046
Total excess Part B premium burden
151st out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$27.1M
Total burden on individuals
$12.5M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
6.3
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 23

Rep. Nicholas A. Langworthy (R)

$35,469,165
Total excess Part B premium burden
77th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$28.8M
Total burden on individuals
$11.6M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
4.8
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 24

Rep. Claudia Tenney (R)

$35,568,455
Total excess Part B premium burden
76th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$29.9M
Total burden on individuals
$9.9M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
3.8
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 25

Rep. Joseph D. Morelle (D)

$32,180,475
Total excess Part B premium burden
155th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$26.8M
Total burden on individuals
$5.6M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
2.1
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries

Congressional District 26

Rep. Timothy M Kennedy (D)

$31,279,699
Total excess Part B premium burden
180th out of 431 districts, where 1st is highest
$25.9M
Total burden on individuals
$6.8M
Excess premiums for TM beneficiaries
2.8
TM beneficiaries for every 10 MA beneficiaries