MedicareYourself

A Free Medicare Agent Who Actually Helps You With the Paperwork

free medicare agent that helps with paperwork

A free Medicare agent that helps with paperwork takes the most stressful part of enrollment off your plate. I'm Anthony Orner, a licensed broker in New Jersey, and I handle applications, carrier forms, and submissions so you don't have to figure it out alone.

You pay nothing. The insurance carriers compensate me directly. Your plan costs the same either way.

Call for Free Advice — 855-559-1700

What paperwork is involved in enrolling in Medicare

Medicare enrollment isn't one form. It's several, depending on what you need:

  • Social Security application for Parts A and B
  • Carrier-specific application for Medicare Advantage (Part C)
  • Separate application for a Medigap/Medicare Supplement plan
  • Part D prescription drug plan enrollment form
  • Creditable coverage documentation if you're leaving employer insurance

Miss one form or check the wrong box, and your coverage gets delayed. That's where I come in.

How a licensed broker handles applications at no cost to you

I compare plans across 30+ carriers, walk you through the best fit, then fill out and submit the paperwork myself. You review, confirm, and sign. That's it.

Carriers pay brokers the same commission whether you call them directly or work with me. The difference is you get a person who follows up, catches errors, and stays on the phone with the carrier when something needs fixing.

Common enrollment mistakes that delay your coverage

  • Wrong effective date. Applying too late can leave you uncovered for weeks or months.
  • Missing Part B enrollment. A late enrollment penalty adds 10% to your $202.90/month premium for every 12-month period you delayed.
  • Incomplete carrier forms. One blank field can bounce your entire application back.
  • No creditable coverage letter. If you're leaving an employer plan, you need proof your old drug coverage was creditable. Without it, you could face a Part D penalty.

What to have ready before your call with Anthony

  • Your Medicare card (red, white, and blue) or Medicare number
  • List of current prescriptions with dosages
  • Names of your doctors and preferred hospitals
  • Your Part B effective date (or expected date if you haven't enrolled yet)
  • Creditable coverage letter from your employer, if applicable

Don't have all of this? Call anyway. I'll help you track it down.

Why people skip the paperwork and then pay for it later

I hear it constantly: someone turned 65 months ago, assumed everything was automatic, and now they're dealing with late penalties or a gap in coverage. Others tried to enroll online, got confused by carrier portals, and gave up halfway through.

Medicare doesn't fix mistakes for free. But getting help upfront costs you nothing.

Ongoing support after enrollment

Enrollment isn't the end. I help with annual plan reviews during Open Enrollment (October 15 through December 7), claims issues, and plan switches if your needs change. One call gets you a real person who already knows your file.

No phone trees. No repeating your story to a stranger every time.

Let me handle the paperwork. You handle retirement.

Call 855-559-1700 or get started online.

Get a Free Quote

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