Scams & Alerts

Scam Alert: Calls Asking for Your Medicare Number

If someone pressures you to share your Medicare number or sign up immediately, it's a scam. Here's how to protect yourself.

Scammers target Medicare beneficiaries year-round, and Utah seniors are no exception. The calls can sound official — but Medicare will never call you out of the blue to ask for your Medicare number, bank details, or payment.

Red flags to watch for

  • Pressure to act immediately or “lose your benefits”
  • Requests for your Medicare number, Social Security number, or bank info
  • Offers of “free” braces, test kits, or equipment in exchange for your number
  • Callers who already claim to “have your file” and just need to “confirm” details

How to protect yourself

  1. Hang up. You’re never obligated to stay on the line.
  2. Never share your Medicare or Social Security number with an unexpected caller.
  3. Guard your Medicare card like a credit card.
  4. When in doubt, call 1-800-MEDICARE directly, or talk to someone you trust.

Already enrolled and want to review your coverage the safe way? Work with a licensed local agent instead of a cold caller. Reach out to Bret — a real Utah Medicare agent — or learn the basics on our Medicare Basics page.

Want a real person to walk through this with you?

Bret Swope is a licensed Utah Medicare agent. No bots, no pressure — just clear answers.