Does Insurance Cover CGM? Medicare, Medicaid, and Commercial Plans Explained

Insurance coverage for CGMs has expanded significantly since 2020. Here is the current coverage landscape for Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial insurance in the US.

Medicare Part B Coverage (2026)

Medicare covers CGMs as Durable Medical Equipment (DME) for beneficiaries who:

  • Have diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2)
  • Use insulin (any type — including basal-only)
  • Have a face-to-face visit with their treating provider documenting insulin use and CGM necessity

Coverage includes the CGM receiver, transmitters, and sensors. Patient cost share: typically 20% of the Medicare-approved amount after the deductible.

Covered CGMs under Medicare Part B (as of 2026): Dexcom G7, FreeStyle Libre 3, Medtronic Guardian 4.

Medicaid Coverage

Medicaid CGM coverage varies by state. Most states cover CGMs for Type 1 diabetes on intensive insulin therapy. Type 2 coverage is less consistent — check your state’s Medicaid fee schedule or ask your endocrinologist’s office to verify coverage before prescribing.

Commercial Insurance

Most major commercial insurers (United, BCBS, Aetna, Cigna) cover CGMs for:

  • Type 1 diabetes: generally well covered with prior authorization
  • Type 2 on insulin: covered by most plans, may require prior auth
  • Type 2 on non-insulin medications: coverage is improving but inconsistent — a letter of medical necessity from your provider significantly helps approval

How to Get CGM Covered

  1. Ask your endocrinologist or primary care provider for a CGM prescription with a diagnosis code (E10.x for T1D, E11.x for T2D)
  2. The provider’s office submits a prior authorization — most approvals take 1-5 business days
  3. If denied: ask for a peer-to-peer review (your doctor speaks directly with the insurance medical director), which reverses denials significantly more often than appeals alone

Manufacturer Assistance Programs

  • Dexcom: Dexcom Access Program reduces cost for uninsured or underinsured patients
  • Abbott: FreeStyle Promise provides sensors for $75/month for eligible patients

OTC As a Backup

For Type 2 patients who cannot get insurance coverage, Dexcom Stelo and Abbott Lingo provide CGM functionality at ~$99/month without a prescription — less than a month’s supply of many name-brand diabetes medications.