
How do we compare Medigap Plan G versus Plan N? The cleanest way is to start with comparing Medicare plans, and then line up Plan G vs Plan N by what you pay out of pocket, not just the monthly premium.

Most folks in Maryland are trying to avoid surprises, keep their budget under control, and still have the freedom to see any doctor that takes Medicare.
That is exactly what this comparison is designed to do.
Plan G vs Plan N is the quick, real-world difference between paying a higher premium for fewer surprises, or paying a lower premium and agreeing to a few small copays along the way.
Both Plan G and Plan N are standardized. That means Plan G is Plan G no matter which company sells it, and the same goes for Plan N. Price is the main difference between companies selling the same letter plan.
Here’s the simple way to think about it.
Bottom line: Plan G tends to win for people who want predictable costs. Plan N tends to win for people who rarely see the doctor and want to save on premium.
Comparing out-of-pocket costs first, not premiums, is how you avoid a bad scenario where the “cheaper plan” becomes the expensive plan.
With Original Medicare, Part B generally leaves you paying 20% coinsurance on many services. That is why Medigap exists in the first place.
So when you compare G vs N, start here:
If you want a fast side-by-side breakdown of what N does and does not cover, the official Medigap benefit chart is one of the clearest resources out there.
Helpful internal pages while you compare:

Excess charges are the detail that can hit your wallet if you are not looking for it.
Here’s the plain-English version: some providers can legally charge more than Medicare’s approved amount in certain situations. When that happens, the leftover amount is the “excess charge.”
This is where Plan G and Plan N separate quickly.
Does that matter in Maryland? For many people, it depends on the doctors they use and whether those providers accept Medicare assignment. Personally, this is one of the first “small lines” we check, because it can turn into a big line item.
Maryland has a tip that surprises a lot of folks. This law includes a yearly guaranteed issue window tied to your birthday that can allow a Medigap policyholder to move to a plan with
equal or lesser benefits without underwriting.
That matters because switching from Plan N to Plan G is typically a move to greater benefits, and that usually triggers underwriting unless you are in a protected window.
So the comparison is not only “Which plan is better?” It is also “How easy is it to change later?”
If you want unbiased help from the state, Maryland SHIP counselors exist for exactly this kind of guidance.
The best way to compare Plan G vs Plan N by company in Maryland is to shop the same letter plan across multiple carriers and look at rate stability, household discounts, and underwriting rules.
Remember, benefits do not change by carrier for the same plan letter. The premium does.
This is why we like clean comparisons across a big list of carriers, not just one company’s quote.
Two more internal topics that help most Maryland shoppers:
If you want us to run it quickly, the fastest starting point is a quote comparison request.

We will keep this part simple, because y’all don’t need fluff. You need clarity.
One client said Kayla was incredibly patient and knowledgeable and helped make Medicare seamless and manageable.
Another client said Kathy has always made my Medicare choices easy and always has my best interest in mind.
That is the goal. Make it easy, and make sure it fits.
The main differences between Medigap Plan G and Plan N come down to copays and excess charges.
Plan N can include copays for some office visits and some ER visits.
Plan G is usually the “fewer surprise bills” route, but you still pay the Part B deductible.
If you want a quick video walkthrough, look up our YouTube video titled “Understanding PLAN G”.
The Part B deductible is not covered by Plan G or Plan N. That is why we always check the current Part B costs straight from Medicare before making a recommendation.
For a simple Medigap overview before you choose, look up our YouTube video titled “Understanding Medicare Supplement Plans”.
Part B excess charges are not covered by Medigap Plan N. Only certain plans cover them, and Plan G is one of the big ones people look at for this reason.
If you want to understand why details like this matter, look up our YouTube video titled “MEDICARE: The Good, Bad, and Ugly”.
The best place to compare Plan G and Plan N side-by-side by company is a quote comparison that shows multiple carriers at once, apples to apples.
You can also use the official Medigap benefit chart to confirm what each plan covers.
Switching from Plan N to Plan G is usually a move to greater benefits, which can mean underwriting unless you are in a protected enrollment situation.
Maryland’s birthday-related guaranteed issue window can help with certain moves to equal or lesser benefits, so it is important to line up the timing before you apply.
If you want a simple “step-by-step” feel for how we guide people through this, look up our YouTube video titled “How We Make Medicare as Easy as 1-2-3”.