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Medicare Part B covers emergency ambulance services and, in limited cases, non-emergency ambulance services. Medicare considers an emergency to be any situation when your health is in serious danger and you cannot be transported safely by other means. If your trip is scheduled when your health is not in immediate danger, it is not considered an emergency.

Eligibility

Part B covers emergency ambulance services if:

To be eligible for coverage of non-emergency ambulance services, you must:

Medicare may cover unscheduled or irregular non-emergency trips, but if you live in a skilled nursing facility (SNF) , a doctor’s written order may be required within 48 hours after the transport. Medicare may also cover scheduled, regular trips if the ambulance supplier receives a written order from your doctor ahead of time stating that transport is medically necessary.

Medicare never covers ambulette services. An ambulette is a wheelchair-accessible van that provides non-emergency transportation. Medicare also does not cover ambulance transportation just because you lack access to alternative transportation.

Note: If you are receiving SNF care under Part A , most ambulance transportation should be paid for by the SNF. The SNF should not bill Medicare for this service.

Costs

Part B covers medically necessary emergency and non-emergency ambulance services at 80% of the Medicare-approved amount . In most cases, you pay a 20% coinsurance after you meet your Part B deductible ($240 in 2024). All ambulance companies that contract with Medicare must be participating providers.