Turn on the television during Open Enrollment, and you will see commercials promising the moon: free groceries, free rides to the doctor, and debit cards loaded with cash. Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans aggressively compete for your business by offering these enticing “extras” that Original Medicare simply does not cover. However, once the enrollment period ends and the coverage begins, many seniors discover that these flashy features come with significant and frustrating strings attached. In 2026, the fine print on these benefits has become much stricter, with new eligibility gates like “SSBCI” codes and logistical hurdles that make using them difficult. Here are seven specific plan features that sound helpful in the brochure but often limit your actual access to care in practice.
1. The “Flex Card” Grocery Allowance
The most heavily marketed feature of 2026 is the “Flex Card,” which claims to be pre-loaded with money for healthy food and utilities. While it sounds like a universal gift card, this benefit is usually filed under “Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill” (SSBCI). To unlock the grocery money, you often must be diagnosed with a specific “qualifying chronic condition” like severe diabetes or heart failure. Your doctor must verify this condition with a specific code, or the funds will remain locked and inaccessible for food purchases. If you are a generally healthy senior, you may find the card has $0 for groceries and is not the guaranteed income boost you expected.
2. “Zero Dollar” Dental Coverage
Plans proudly advertise “$0 copay for preventive dental” and “comprehensive dental coverage” to attract seniors concerned about oral health. This sounds like you can finally get that expensive crown or root canal fixed for free, but the reality is often different. The coverage usually comes with a low Annual Maximum of just $1,000 or $1,500, which is easily exhausted by a single major procedure. Once you hit that low cap, you are responsible for paying 100% of the cost for any remaining work needed that year. Furthermore, the “comprehensive” coinsurance is often 50%, meaning you still pay half the bill within a narrow network of dentists.
3. “Care Coordination” Managers
Many plans assign you a “Care Coordinator” or “Case Manager,” pitched as a personal concierge to help you navigate the healthcare system. In practice, these coordinators often function as gatekeepers whose primary role is to steer you toward in-network, lower-cost facilities. In 2026, “care coordination” is frequently the mechanism used to enforce strict Prior Authorization rules that delay necessary treatments. Instead of facilitating a quick referral to a specialist, the coordinator may require you to try “step therapy” or cheaper alternatives first. This process effectively slows down your access to specialized care under the guise of helping you manage it.
4. Transportation Benefits
“Free rides to medical appointments” is marketed as a lifeline for seniors who no longer drive and need reliable transport. However, these benefits are strictly capped at a low number, such as 12 one-way trips per year, and require 48 to 72 hours’ advance notice. You cannot use them for an urgent care visit today because the scheduling window is too rigid for emergencies. Worse, they are typically “curb-to-curb” services, meaning the driver cannot get out of the car to help you down the stairs. For seniors with significant mobility issues, a ride that stops at the curb is often useless and inaccessible.
5. Quarterly OTC Credits
Plans often offer $50 or $100 per quarter to spend on everyday items like toothpaste, vitamins, and pain relievers. You typically cannot spend this money at your local Walmart or Amazon, but must order from the plan’s specific proprietary catalog. In 2026, seniors are reporting massive “catalog inflation,” where a bottle of generic ibuprofen costing $4 at a pharmacy is listed for **$12** in the catalog. This means the “free money” has much less purchasing power than real cash would have at a regular store. Additionally, if you forget to order by the end of the quarter, the balance often expires instantly and does not roll over.
6. Worldwide Emergency Coverage
Original Medicare offers no coverage outside the US, so Advantage plans often tout “Worldwide Emergency Coverage” as a major travel perk. The limitation is that this is almost always a reimbursement-only benefit, meaning the foreign hospital will not bill your US plan. You must pay the entire bill, which can exceed $5,000, upfront on your credit card before you leave the hospital. Upon returning home, you must submit translated receipts to your plan, a reimbursement process that can take months to complete. They often deny claims that they deem “urgent” rather than “emergency,” leaving you with the debt if the diagnosis wasn’t life-threatening.
7. “Telehealth-First” Networks
Plans offer “$0 copay” for telehealth visits, which sounds like a great way to avoid the germs in a waiting room. To get the $0 price, you often must use the plan’s specific third-party vendor, like Teladoc or MDLIVE, not your own doctor. If you video chat with your regular Primary Care Physician (PCP), you are charged the standard office visit copay of $20 to $50. This feature creates a fragmented system where you see a random doctor for cheap, rather than maintaining a relationship with your own provider. You save money in the short term, but you lose the continuity of care that is vital for managing chronic conditions.
Read the “Evidence of Coverage”
The “Summary of Benefits” is just the marketing brochure; the “Evidence of Coverage” (EOC) is the actual legal contract. Before you try to use a flex card or book a ride, you must search your EOC for keywords like “limitations,” “authorization,” and “network.” That document is where the real rules are hiding, and reading it can save you from unexpected bills later. Understanding these restrictions now will prevent you from being caught off guard when you need care the most. Only by knowing the fine print can you ensure that your health plan actually works for you.
Did you try to use your grocery card and get declined at the register? Leave a comment below—tell us which store it was!



















