Marc Butler, Medicare Insurance Broker

About Me

Hi, I’m Marc. My wife, Mariselle, also speaks Spanish, and together we bring over 20 years of experience. We’re your local Medicare advisors, and we also handle home and auto insurance.

We can compare plans from trusted national and local carriers and match coverage to your needs and budget. Our services are free, and we have a local office...

Call today for a coverage review and quote comparison or stop by and say hello...

Get in touch with Marc using this form

Directions to My Office

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My Google Reviews

197 Total Reviews   (5.0 )

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Roberto Llavina
May 29, 2026

Annette is wonderful. She helped me to get a new auto and home insurance and I saved a lot of $$$$. Thanks Butler Insurance.

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Joyce
May 29, 2026

Annette was amazing! She helped me lower my auto policy, and I was able to stay with Progressive. 20/10, highly recommend!

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CaroL GA
May 28, 2026

The best service with a smile Annette is ALWAYS READY TO HELP. SAVE MONEY ON CAR INSURANCE I RECOMMEND TO ALL

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PINKPEARLSNGIRLS
May 28, 2026

Annette was absolutely wonderful! Fast friendly service. Very knowledgeable and helped me save $$$. I’d definitely recommend.

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Sandra
May 27, 2026

Super friendly and quick. Got what we needed done in less than 24 hours. Made everything a breeze!!! Thank you Annette

Q&A with Marc Butler

Answer: Yes, you can get Medicare if you never worked or didn't pay into the system, but you will likely have to pay a monthly premium for Part A (hospital insurance). To get it for free, you generally need 10 years (40 quarters) of work or qualify for low income Medicaid!

Answer: Yes, but you will have get a referral form your PCP to see a to see a specialist who after a sleep study may recommend a CPAP...

Answer: Dental is expensive and there isn't any MAPD plan that covers much mote than cleanings!

I always explain this... probably because I been a agent for long time!

Answer: Make sure your card is showing Medicare part A & B, without these you cannot join a plana and save money

Answer: Special Needs Plans, SNPs, are Medicare Advantage plans built for specific groups. You must qualify to enroll.

Three types:

D-SNP

For people with Medicare and Medicaid.

Usually $0 copays, drugs included, extra dental, vision, transport, care coordinator.

C-SNP

For certain diseases like diabetes, heart failure, COPD.

Focused networks and treatment programs for that condition.

I-SNP

For nursing home residents or people needing long-term nursing care at home.

Doctors manage care directly where the patient lives.

Answer: Many insurance companies require prior authorizations for major surgeries I.e like a knee replacement. This is quite common

Answer: Have a great agent who you can visit anytime you like.

We have our own office which is open Monday to Friday. Our clients come in and see us ask us questions, get help on medications anything they need

Answer: Yes.

Maximum Out-of-Pocket limits for Medicare Advantage plans are set each year by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

• CMS sets a maximum cap annually.

• Plans can set lower MOOP limits, but not higher than the CMS limit.

• The amount often increases slightly each year due to inflation adjustments.

Always review MOOP during Annual Enrollment Period. It directly impacts your worst-case financial exposure.

Answer: IRMAA is based on your tax return from two years prior.

Your 2027 Medicare premiums will be based on your 2025 tax return.

If the 401(k) withdrawal happened in 2024, it would affect your 2026 premiums, not 2027.

You file Form SSA-44 only after you receive an IRMAA determination notice, and only if you had a qualifying life-changing event, such as retirement or work reduction. A one-time withdrawal by itself is not a qualifying event.

If your 2025 income drops back to normal, your 2027 premium should automatically return to the lowest tier without filing SSA-44.

Answer: Yes.

Medicare Advantage plans are county-based. Availability depends on your ZIP code.

• Each plan has a defined service area.

• Benefits and premiums vary by county.

• Provider networks are local.

If you move outside the plan’s service area, you must switch plans.

Answer: If you qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid, you are “dual eligible.”

How it works:

• Medicare pays first.

• Medicaid pays second.

• Medicaid helps cover premiums, deductibles, and copays.

You may also qualify for extra help with prescription drug costs.

Bottom line: Medicare is your primary insurance. Medicaid reduces or eliminates most out-of-pocket costs.

Answer: TRICARE

If you have TRICARE for Life, you must enroll in Medicare Part A and Part B at 65.

• Medicare pays first

• TRICARE pays second

If you skip Part B, you lose TRICARE for Life.

VA benefits

You do not have to enroll in Medicare to keep VA coverage.

• VA only covers care at VA facilities or approved providers

• Medicare does not pay at VA facilities

Many veterans enroll in Medicare for access to non-VA doctors and hospitals.

Answer: • Plan comparison. Agents compare Medicare Advantage, Supplement, and Part D plans side by side so you see premiums, copays, networks, and drug costs clearly.

• Cost protection. They check your prescriptions and doctors to avoid expensive mistakes.

• Ongoing support. Plans change every year. You get help at enrollment and year-round service.

It costs you nothing. The insurance company pays the agent, not you.

Answer: Original Medicare does not cover supplements, herbs, homeopathy, or most alternative treatments.

Not covered:

• Vitamins and dietary supplements

• Herbal remedies

• Homeopathic treatments

• Naturopathic care

Limited exceptions:

• Chiropractic spinal manipulation

• Acupuncture for chronic low back pain only

Part D covers FDA-approved prescription drugs, not over-the-counter or natural products.

Some Medicare Advantage plans offer small OTC allowances, but coverage is limited and varies by plan.