In April Medicare began to mail new ID cards to its 60 million members. It is expected to be a year-long project. To learn more about when your card will arrive, go to medicare.gov/NewCard
FRAUD ALERT! – The cards are FREE. If someone calls you or calls someone you know who is on Medicare asking to verify your SSN as a prerequisite to getting a new card – HANG UP! Fraudsters are calling Medicare Beneficiaries, demanding payment for the cards.
AARP did a survey and found that 60 percent of those surveyed mistakenly believe they might have to pay for the revamped cards.

The new cards are free. And more than half of respondents to the survey said they might not be suspicious if they received a call — supposedly from Medicare — asking them to verify their SSNs as a prerequisite to getting a new card. Medicare officials have emphasized that they will never call beneficiaries about the cards, which are being mailed out by the Social Security Administration.
The new Medicare card displays a unique combination of letters and numbers instead of your Social Security Number. The new cards are a step forward for fraud prevention, but con artists are trying to scam seniors.
Scammers posing as Medicare representatives are already calling those who have Medicare currently demanding a processing fee for the new card. Other fraudsters are telling beneficiaries that they are owed a refund on their old card, and asking for bank account information to process the reimbursement to their account.
Medicare will NEVER ask an enrollee for a bank account number, and no refunds are owed.
Check out AARP’s Fraud Watch Network for more prevention tips and advice on many types of scams. Watch the 50 second video below to hear the message from AARP. about the Medicare Card Scams.

About the author: Jean Garboden is an Elder Advocate and Eden Alternative Educator with over 30 years’ experience in not-for-profit and for-profit healthcare organizations. She is honored to lead the mission and values culture development for Compass Senior Living in Eugene, Oregon. Jean lives in Las Vegas, Nevada where she enjoys the weather and volunteers with the Nevadans for the Common Good, advocating for caregivers and elders in southern Nevada