WHAT IS COVERED

Which Plan Pays Benefits First

If your other plan does not coordinate benefits, it is automatically considered the primary plan for coverage, and it is required to pay benefits first. If both plans coordinate benefits, these guidelines apply:

  • The health plan covering the patient directly is the primary plan and pays first, and the other plan is secondary. For example, coverage under this Plan is primary for you but secondary for your spouse if he or she has coverage through his or her employer. If both the husband and the wife are covered in MILA, the husband’s Plan is primary for him and secondary for his wife and the wife’s coverage is primary for her and secondary for her husband;
  • If a dependent child lives with both parents and the child is covered by both parents’ plans, the plan of the parent whose birthday falls earlier in the calendar year pays benefits first for that child. If both parents have the same birthday, the plan that has covered one of the parents longer pays first. If one parent’s plan does not recognize these “birthday” coordination rules, the father’s plan pays first;
  • In a case of divorce or separation, the plan of the parent who has court-ordered financial responsibility for the dependent child pays first. If there is no court order, the plan of the parent with actual custody, whether or not he or she remarries, pays first. For court-ordered joint custody, the birthday rules described above apply;