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Texas · Medicare DME Coverage

Does Texas Medicaid Cover a CGM?

Last verified May 1, 2026 · 3 sources cited

Yes — Medicare Part B covers a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) when you have diabetes and meet documented monitoring criteria. As of 2023, you no longer need to be on insulin if you have a documented history of problematic hypoglycemia.

Who qualifies

  • You have a diagnosis of diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2).
  • Your doctor has prescribed the CGM and documents the medical need.
  • You either use insulin OR have a documented history of problematic hypoglycemia.
  • You or your caregiver are trained to use the device and act on its readings.

Qualifying conditions

  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Type 2 diabetes on insulin
  • Type 2 diabetes with documented problematic hypoglycemia (CMS expanded criteria, effective April 2023)

What it costs

2026 Part B deductible
$240
Your coinsurance
20%
  • After meeting the Part B deductible, Medicare pays 80%; you pay the remaining 20% — unless you have a Medigap plan that covers it.
  • Most Medicare Advantage plans cover CGM at parity, but copay structures vary.
  • Supplies (sensors, transmitters) ship as a recurring DME benefit — usually monthly or quarterly.

Check if you qualify

Step 1 of 2

Takes about 60 seconds. We'll show you what your plan covers and connect you with a supplier if you qualify for CGM.

Prior authorization timeline

Typically 5–10 business days once your doctor submits the order and clinical documentation.

Frequently asked

Does Medicare cover a CGM if I'm not on insulin?

Yes, as of April 2023. CMS expanded coverage to include people with Type 2 diabetes who have a documented history of problematic hypoglycemia, even without insulin use. Your doctor must document at least two qualifying hypoglycemic events.

Which CGMs does Medicare cover?

Medicare covers therapeutic CGMs that meet FDA non-adjunctive use criteria — currently Dexcom G6/G7, FreeStyle Libre 2/3, and Eversense. Stelo and other over-the-counter CGMs are not currently Medicare-covered as of 2026.

How much does a CGM cost with Medicare?

After the 2026 Part B deductible ($240), you pay 20% coinsurance on the Medicare-approved amount. Out-of-pocket monthly cost typically runs $40–$80 depending on the device and your supplemental coverage.

Can I switch from FreeStyle Libre to Dexcom on Medicare?

Yes. Your doctor writes a new prescription for the device you want, and your DME supplier processes the switch. There is no waiting period, but you cannot bill both devices in the same supply month.

Does Medicaid cover CGM?

It varies by state. Many states cover CGM under Medicaid for Type 1 and insulin-dependent Type 2; non-insulin coverage is expanding but inconsistent. See our state-specific pages for current rules.

Sources

Texas Medicaid coverage

Covered

Texas Medicaid covers CGMs through the DME benefit (TMPPM 2.2.12.7) when the device has a dedicated receiver/monitor. Updated PA criteria took effect Feb 1, 2024.

Timeline
Standard home-health DME PA

Who qualifies in Texas

  • Diabetes mellitus diagnosis
  • Insulin-treated OR documented recurrent level 2 hypoglycemia
  • In-person or approved telehealth visit within 6 months prior
  • Re-evaluation visit every 6 months for continued coverage

Supplier requirements

DME provider must be Medicare-certified before TX Medicaid enrollment. Device must include sensor + transmitter + dedicated receiver on same claim.

Managed care

STAR/STAR+PLUS MCOs administer DME PA with their own forms; FFS uses TMHP Home Health Services PA. PA criteria are uniform per state policy but submission portals differ by MCO.

Common gotchas (most reference sites miss these)

  • Smartphone-only CGMs (no dedicated receiver) are NOT covered as DME — must have a covered receiver on the same claim
  • PA not required for ongoing supplies once device is approved
  • Missing the 6-month re-evaluation visit terminates coverage