Seniors
Related: About this forumNew Medicare Cards (and number) apparently not a scam.
Last edited Fri May 29, 2026, 07:40 PM - Edit history (2)
My spouse received a new card a couple of weeks ago with a new number. I got one today. Both are set to be effective June 17.
Apparently they sent out a first batch of replacements (for what was supposed to be a forever number) with a new number effective April 14. This is a second batch, effective June 17. (I checked, and the Medicare site already has our new numbers)
What a royal pain. I have to remember to carry and use my old (identical, but for the number) card until June 17, and then remember to give every provider I see after that my new number . . . at least one of whom I won't see until January. And, to make matters worse, I'm out of the country on the switchover day.
Just thought I'd let y'all know - since my first thought when my spouse gave me her card (without the accompanying letter) my first thought was that it was one of the scams going around.
ETA: Good lord, folks. I know how to sort scam from reality. I was not asking you to speculate on it - I'm sharing the information because it LOOKS like a scam, but is NOT a scam. If you receive a new card and don't use your new cards, your claims may be denied. If you get a card with a new number, feel free to log in to your Medicare account and make sure the new number is the one reflected in your account. And, for good measure, pull up any prior EOB and confirm that your number on that old EOB matches your old card.
News clip on the issue effective April 14:
From the PA Department of Aging regarding the first batch of cards effective April 14:
https://www.facebook.com/PennsylvaniaAging/posts/about-13-million-medicare-beneficiaries-will-receive-new-id-numbers-mbis-with-an/1264825525825138/
From the Baltimore Department on Aging regarding the cards effective April 14
https://www.facebook.com/BaltimoreCountyAging/photos/approximately-13-million-medicare-beneficiaries-are-being-reissued-new-medicare-/1269905358584501/
There is virtually no information regarding the second issue, but I did find one article - AND - the Medicare site already reflects the new Medicare number in both accounts. It would be pretty hard for a scammer to change the numbers in our Medicare accounts.
Some Medicare beneficiaries are receiving a new Medicare card and number due to a data breach affecting 1.4 million beneficiaries. This update helps protect against fraud and keep personal information secure.
https://www.cannoncourier.com/article/22435/medicare-customers-receiving-new-cards-due-to-breach
Here's a copy of the letter:

It's a crappy way to go about it - there should be an official announcement from Medicare, and a lot more public information available - which is why I posted here. Resolving claims that were billed to the wrong number is a royal pain. I haven't had to do that - but I have had to get stuff mistakenly billed to my old insurance company rebilled to Medicare. Not fun. I'm trying to save you some hassles.
in2herbs
(4,587 posts)Why is CMS issuing new Medicare cards and new Medicare numbers?
The law requires the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to remove Social Security
Numbers (SSNs) from all Medicare cards by April 2019. A new unique Medicare number will replace
the current Health Insurance Claim Number (HICN) on the new Medicare cards. Were taking this
step to protect people with Medicare from fraudulent use of SSNs, which can lead to identity theft and
illegal use of Medicare benefits.
When will CMS mail the new cards to people with Medicare, and what is the mailing schedule?
Well begin mailing new cards in April 2018 and will meet the statutory deadline for replacing all Medicare
cards by April 2019. Your patients who are new to the Medicare program starting in April 2018 and
later will only have a card with the new Medicare number.
There will be geographical waves of successive mailings. Mailing everyone a new card will take some
time. To protect people with Medicare from scams associated with sharing the mailing schedule,
targeted local outreach will occur, including outreach to health care providers, before cards are due to
arrive in a geographical area.
What do I need to be ready for the change?
Your systems and business processes must be ready to accept the new Medicare number (which
we call the Medicare Beneficiary Identifier or MBI in official guidance) by April 2018 for transactions,
such as billing, claim status, eligibility status, and interactions, with our Medicare Administrative
Contractor (MAC) contact centers.
There will be a transition period when you can use either the HICN or the MBI to exchange
data and information with us. The transition period will start April 1, 2018, and run through
December 31, 2019. However, your systems must be ready to accept the new MBI by April 1, 2018.
Its especially important that youre ready for people who are new to Medicare in April 2018 and later
because theyll only get a card with the MBI.
Attilatheblond
(9,327 posts)We are wise to address any 'official' governmental change in ID cards for services WE PAY FOR with extreme vigilance.
Ms. Toad
(38,853 posts)Not to mention that the instructions tell you to treat it like your credit card and never share it with anyone except medical providers.
Attilatheblond
(9,327 posts)Those guys like information and they are not trustworthy about how they use it all. If they weren't finding ways to profit and/or market with information, they wouldn't be gathering so much. My concerns are how much information is Trump/GOP twerps allowing to slip into hands that shouldn't have it.
Ms. Toad
(38,853 posts)And I don't think the replacement numbers will do anything to alleviate those concerns.
Marthe48
(23,528 posts)The OP just got their new cards/numbers in2026?
in2herbs
(4,587 posts)Ms. Toad
(38,853 posts)Go back and review what I've added to the OP, so I don't have to add it in each comment.
The first replacement was well documented. This second batch is less well documented, but scammers don't have access to my Medicare account to change the number in the account. The number in my account matches the number on the new card they just sent me.
Attilatheblond
(9,327 posts)Raven123
(7,924 posts)Ms. Toad
(38,853 posts)They have now issued two batches of new Medicare cards with new numbers. The first is well-documented, the second less so.
Review the information I added to the OP, so I didn't have to repeat it for each response in the thread.
Raven123
(7,924 posts)Ms. Toad
(38,853 posts)I did all that research when my spouse got her card a week or two ago, and confirmed it was real.
I was just trying to give people a heads up so they didn't get caught off-guard and toss the card, then get hit with a lot of rejected claims because they were still using their old number. I didn't expect everyone in the thread to insist it was a scam (given how much fake stuff I debunk around here!).
bucolic_frolic
(55,982 posts)due to security compromises. So there is that.
Ms. Toad
(38,853 posts)The first batch had an effective date of April 14.
I have only found one news report for this second issue with an effective date of June 17.
(And nothing formal, for either one, from Medicare - aside from the letter which came with the card.)
ImNotGod
(1,241 posts)she contacted the medicals involved and Medicare. After confirming the fraud they just told her to keep an eye on any suspicious activity but said it didn't warrant a card replacement. I think they changed their mind and sent her a new card after. The musk fu mess.
Ms. Toad
(38,853 posts)If your sister got the same letter, she's apparently part of the second batch of cards issued with new numbers (unrelated to the charges in another state).