Services Not Covered
Plans vary in which specific drugs they cover, and you won’t get help with the cost of a drug that is not covered by a plan. For example, a plan may cover only certain cholesterol-reducing drugs. If the specific cholesterol-reducing drug you take isn’t covered by a plan, the plan won’t help you with the cost of that drug.
The federal government also requires plans to exclude certain types of drugs from the plan entirely. Weight-loss drugs are one example. Some plans, called enhanced plans, do cover some of these types of drugs.
In most plans, there is a stage of cost sharing called the “coverage gap,” or the “doughnut hole.” In this stage you must pay most of the plan’s price for the medications you take.