How to File a Medicare Grievance
A Medicare grievance is a formal complaint about your plan's service, quality of care, or how your plan operates — not about coverage denials or payment disputes. If you're unhappy with how you've been treated by your Medicare plan, filing a grievance is your right and the process is straightforward.
Key facts:
- File within 60 days of the issue
- Your plan must respond within 30 days (24 hours for urgent care-related grievances)
- You can file by phone, mail, or online depending on your plan
- Your plan cannot retaliate against you for filing
Grievance vs. Appeal: What's the Difference?
File a grievance when you're complaining about:
- Rude or unhelpful staff
- Long wait times at a provider's office
- Difficulty getting information from your plan
- Problems with customer service
- Quality of care concerns (not related to a denial)
File an appeal when:
- Your plan denied coverage for a service, drug, or item
- Your plan stopped covering something you've been receiving
- You disagree with the amount you were charged
When to File a Grievance
You must file your grievance within 60 days of the event or issue. Don't wait — the sooner you file, the easier it is to document the problem and get a resolution.
How to File: Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Gather Your Information
Before contacting your plan, collect:
- Your Medicare number and plan ID
- Date(s) of the incident
- Names of people involved (staff, providers)
- A written description of what happened
- Any supporting documents (letters, bills, appointment records)
Step 2: Contact Your Plan
Call the member services number on your Medicare card or plan materials. You can file by phone, in writing, or online depending on your plan. Ask for a grievance form if one is available.
Step 3: Request Acknowledgment
Ask your plan to confirm receipt of your grievance in writing. Note the date you filed, who you spoke with, and any reference or case number you receive.
Step 4: Track the Response Timeline
Your plan is required to respond within specific timeframes. Mark your calendar and follow up if you don't hear back.
Response Timelines
| Grievance Type | Plan Must Respond Within |
|---|---|
| Standard grievance | 30 calendar days |
| Expedited (urgent care situation) | 24 hours |
| Quality of care grievance | 30 calendar days |
Escalating Your Grievance
If your plan's response doesn't resolve the issue, you have additional options:
- Contact 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) to report the issue
- File a complaint with your State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) for free, personalized counseling
- Report the issue to the Medicare Beneficiary Ombudsman who advocates for beneficiary rights
Quality of Care Grievances: Special Rules
If your concern is specifically about the quality of medical care you received, you have an additional avenue: filing directly with your Beneficiary and Family Centered Care Quality Improvement Organization (BFCC-QIO). This organization reviews care quality independently of your plan.
BFCC-QIOs can investigate whether the care you received met accepted standards of practice. This is particularly useful when you believe a medical error occurred or your treatment was substandard.
