The enrollment coordinator closes AEP with 200 new members. Cost per enrollment from digital campaigns looks manageable. The dashboard is green. The sales team celebrated.

By the end of OEP in March, 30 of those members have switched to a competing plan. Commission reconciliation claws back compensation on those 30. The marketing spend that acquired them does not come back. The 170 members who stayed cost significantly more per head than the enrollment report showed — and that number is still missing the compliance costs, agent certification overhead, and aggregator fees that belong in the acquisition calculation.

True cost per enrolled member in Medicare Advantage is one of the most consistently miscalculated numbers in health insurance marketing — because it requires combining data from ad platforms, CRM enrollment records, carrier commission portals, and compliance tracking into a single reconciled figure. Most operators track cost per lead. Some track cost per enrollment. Almost none of them calculate cost per persistently enrolled member after AEP-to-OEP disenrollment is applied.

How Medicare Advantage Enrollment Periods Create a Unique Cost Problem

Medicare Advantage enrollment operates on a federally mandated calendar that creates a cost structure unlike any other insurance market. The Annual Enrollment Period (AEP) runs October 15 through December 7 — the primary window when beneficiaries can switch plans. Every broker and plan spends the bulk of their acquisition budget in this 54-day window competing for the same pool of Medicare-eligible beneficiaries.

What happens next is where the acquisition math breaks down. The Open Enrollment Period (OEP) runs January 1 through March 31. During OEP, any Medicare Advantage member can switch to a different MA plan — once. Members enrolled in AEP who have second thoughts, who receive aggressive outreach from competing plans, or who discover their preferred providers are out of network switch during OEP.

According to CMS Medicare Advantage enrollment data, plan-level disenrollment rates vary significantly by carrier, geography, and plan competitiveness — but industry-reported OEP switch rates consistently run 8 to 20 percent of AEP-acquired members in competitive markets. Every switched member represents a full acquisition cost with zero net revenue retention.

54
Days in AEP to acquire
most of the year's members
8–20%
OEP switch rate on
AEP-acquired members
3–5×
True cost per retained member
vs. dashboard CPL

Commission Structure and Clawback: What the CRM Doesn't Show

CMS regulates maximum broker and agent compensation for Medicare Advantage enrollments. Per CMS compensation regulations, agent and broker commissions for new MA enrollments are capped annually — with renewal commissions set at approximately half the new-member rate. These commissions represent the revenue that must cover acquisition cost for independent brokers and FMOs.

When a member disenrolls, the commission picture changes. Carriers and aggregators have varying clawback and reconciliation policies — but a member who switches plans during OEP effectively reduces the return on that enrollment's acquisition spend. For FMOs and independent brokers who front-loaded marketing spend in AEP expecting a full commission stream, OEP disenrollment directly erodes the economics of every campaign that ran in October and November.

This clawback dynamic is entirely invisible on a marketing dashboard. The platform counted the enrollment as a conversion in November. The OEP switch happens in February. Those two events live in completely separate systems — the ad platform and the carrier commission portal — and no standard marketing report connects them.

"The platform counted the enrollment in November. The clawback happened in February. No dashboard connected them."

CMS Compliance Costs That Belong in the Acquisition Calculation

Medicare Advantage marketing operates under CMS marketing guidelines that are among the most detailed compliance requirements in any marketing vertical. These requirements carry real costs that almost universally appear in legal or compliance budgets rather than marketing acquisition cost — which means they are never reconciled back to cost per enrolled member.

AHIP certification: Agents selling Medicare Advantage are required to complete annual America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) certification. The AHIP Medicare certification exam costs $175 per agent. Add agent time — typically 4 to 6 hours per certification cycle — and the per-agent annual cost runs $300 to $500 fully loaded. For organizations with multiple agents, this scales linearly and belongs in cost per enrollment calculations.

Scope of Appointment (SOA) documentation: CMS requires documented Scope of Appointment for in-person sales meetings — 48 hours in advance in most cases. SOA tracking, documentation infrastructure, and audit readiness add administrative overhead per enrollment that belongs in the acquisition calculation.

Marketing material compliance review: All marketing materials must be submitted to the plan for CMS compliance review before use. Legal review time, revision cycles, and resubmission overhead add cost to every campaign that runs during AEP — cost that belongs to the acquisition budget, not the legal department.

Call recording and attestation: Telephonic enrollments require recorded calls or member attestation. Infrastructure, storage, and audit compliance for telephonic enrollment documentation add per-enrollment cost that most operators track nowhere near their marketing acquisition line.

The Full Cost Per Persistently Enrolled Member

Here is what the calculation looks like when everything is reconciled. This is an illustrative example — run it against your own AEP numbers.

An FMO runs $60,000 in combined digital and aggregator spend during AEP. The campaigns generate 400 leads. At a 50 percent lead-to-enrollment rate, 200 members are enrolled.

True Cost Per Persistently Enrolled Member · AEP Campaign
Total AEP marketing spend$60,000
Leads generated400 leads
Enrollments at 50% conversion200 enrolled
Reported cost per enrollment$300
OEP disenrollment (14%)28 members lost
Persistently enrolled members172 members
Media cost per retained member$349
AHIP certification: 5 agents × $450$2,250
Compliance review & SOA infrastructure$3,800
Agent time: 200 enrollments × $35 avg$7,000
Aggregator referral fees (40% of leads)$8,400
Fully loaded cost per retained member$473
Dashboard-reported cost per enrollment$300
Gap per retained member$173

The dashboard reports $300 cost per enrollment. The reconciled cost per member who stays enrolled through OEP is $473 — and that number does not yet account for mid-year SEP disenrollments, which add another layer of attrition for members who qualify for Special Enrollment Period switches due to life events. For FMOs dependent on renewal commission streams, the economics of every enrollment that doesn't retain compound over the life of the member relationship.

How Channel Mix Changes Retention and True Cost

Not all Medicare Advantage acquisition channels produce the same disenrollment rates. The channel relationship matters as much as the cost per lead.

ChannelApprox. CPLOEP Retention RateEst. Cost Per Retained Member
Agent Referral / Community$80–$20088–94%$90–$230
Direct Mail$120–$28084–91%$145–$335
Google Search (branded)$180–$35080–88%$215–$440
TV / Radio$200–$50078–86%$235–$640
Lead aggregators$100–$25072–82%$125–$345 + referral fee

Aggregator-sourced leads show the lowest retention rates because the member relationship belongs to the aggregator platform, not the agent or plan. Members acquired through GoHealth, SelectQuote, eHealth, or similar platforms are comparison shoppers by definition — they used a comparison tool to enroll and are more likely to use it again during OEP. The low headline CPL from aggregators does not survive contact with OEP disenrollment data and referral fee reconciliation.

Agent referral and community-sourced enrollments show the highest retention because the member has a personal relationship with the agent. They are not switching plans in February — they are calling the same agent if they have questions. This channel shows the highest apparent cost in agent time but consistently produces the lowest true cost per persistently enrolled member.

The Seven Cost Layers in Medicare Advantage Acquisition

Disenrollment and compliance are the most visible gaps in MA acquisition cost — but the full picture includes additional layers documented in the seven cost layers framework:

Platform fees (Layer 1): Digital campaigns run through Google and Meta carry standard platform fees and bid competition premiums during AEP, when every MA plan and broker is bidding on the same beneficiary audience simultaneously. CPCs spike materially during the October–December window.

Aggregator referral fees (Layer 2): Aggregators charge referral fees, commission splits, or per-lead fees that significantly inflate the true cost of leads sourced through comparison platforms. These fees rarely appear in the ad platform's cost reporting — they are invoiced separately and tracked in accounting, not marketing dashboards.

Variable acquisition costs (Layer 7): Agent time per enrollment, SOA documentation, compliance attestation, and onboarding calls are direct costs of acquiring each member that belong in the cost per enrollment calculation — not in general overhead. Most organizations track these as operations costs, which means they never reconcile back to channel-level acquisition economics.

Understanding the full true CAC framework across all seven layers is the starting point for making rational AEP budget decisions — not CPL benchmarks from aggregator platforms that have a financial incentive to make their leads look cheap.

How to Reconcile True Cost Per Enrolled Member

  • 1
    Pull all AEP enrollments from your CRM with channel attribution. Date of enrollment, acquiring agent, lead source. This is your starting denominator.
  • 2
    Pull OEP disenrollment data from carrier portals. Which members switched, which plans they moved to, effective dates. Apply disenrollment back to the originating channel. Your denominator just got smaller — and now varies by channel.
  • 3
    Pull all AEP marketing spend by channel. Digital, aggregator referral fees, direct mail, TV, agent time. Do not blend — calculate cost per retained member by channel separately. The channel-level numbers are where the budget decisions live.
  • 4
    Calculate AHIP and compliance overhead. Total AHIP certification cost divided by enrolled members. SOA documentation and compliance review time divided by enrolled members. Add to per-member acquisition cost.
  • 5
    Calculate agent time per enrollment by channel. Direct agent sourcing carries high agent time per member. Aggregator leads carry low agent time but high referral fees. Neither shows correctly on a standard marketing dashboard.
  • 6
    Calculate reconciled cost per retained member by channel. Total channel spend plus allocated compliance and agent costs, divided by members still enrolled after OEP. This is the number that should drive next AEP budget allocation.

The result will show you which channels are producing persistently enrolled members at an economics that makes sense relative to your commission structure — and which channels look cheap per lead but expensive per retained member once OEP disenrollment and compliance overhead are reconciled. The contribution margin framework covers how to extend this into a full profitability view per acquisition channel.

How CDAI Reconciles True Cost Per Enrolled Member

CDAI connects your ad platforms, CRM enrollment data, carrier commission portals, and compliance cost tracking to reconcile true cost per persistently enrolled Medicare Advantage member automatically — across all seven cost layers, updated nightly.

The engine does not stop at cost per lead or cost per enrollment. It applies OEP disenrollment rates back to originating campaigns, allocates compliance overhead by enrolled member, and reconciles aggregator referral fees against platform-reported CPL. The output is a campaign-level cost per retained member — not what the dashboard reported, but what each AEP campaign actually cost per member still on the books after OEP closes.

Directives follow: Scale, Hold, Cut, Pause, or Flag — with confidence scores and reason codes for every campaign, retested 30 days later. See how CDAI reconciles Medicare Advantage acquisition cost across the full member retention lifecycle.

The free 30-Day Distortion Audit pulls your last AEP's campaign data, reconciles cost per retained member by channel including disenrollment and compliance overhead, and returns a channel-by-channel breakdown with directive recommendations. No cost, no commitment.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the true cost per enrolled member in Medicare Advantage marketing?
True cost per enrolled member in Medicare Advantage must account for disenrollment during OEP, commission clawbacks on members who switch plans, AHIP certification costs, CMS marketing compliance overhead, and aggregator referral fees that are not reflected in platform CPL. A broker or FMO reporting $300 cost per enrollment from digital campaigns is typically paying $900 to $1,500 per member who stays enrolled through the first 12 months — once disenrollment rates, clawbacks, and compliance costs are fully reconciled.
How does AEP disenrollment affect Medicare Advantage acquisition cost?
Members enrolled during AEP (October 15–December 7) can switch plans during OEP (January 1–March 31). When a member switches, the originating broker or carrier loses that member's commission — and in many cases faces reconciliation or clawback on compensation already received. Industry disenrollment rates from AEP to OEP run 8–20% depending on market, plan competitiveness, and the member's prior plan relationship. Each disenrolled member removes a conversion from the cost-per-member denominator while the full acquisition spend remains in the numerator.
What compliance costs belong in Medicare Advantage acquisition cost calculations?
CMS requires agents selling Medicare Advantage to complete annual AHIP certification training — $175 per agent plus time. CMS marketing guidelines require Scope of Appointment documentation, 48-hour advance notice for in-person meetings, recording or attestation for telephonic enrollments, and annual review of all marketing materials. These costs belong in the acquisition cost calculation, not the compliance budget, because they are a required cost of generating a Medicare Advantage enrollment.
Why do Medicare Advantage lead aggregators produce high true cost per enrolled member?
Medicare Advantage lead aggregators charge referral fees or commission splits that significantly increase cost per enrolled member above what platform CPL shows. Aggregator-sourced leads also carry higher disenrollment rates because the member relationship belongs to the aggregator platform, not the plan or broker — making retention weaker. The combination of high referral cost and elevated disenrollment makes aggregator-sourced enrollments consistently more expensive per persistently enrolled member than direct marketing or agent referral channels.
How does CDAI reconcile true cost per enrolled member for Medicare Advantage?
CDAI connects marketing platform data, CRM enrollment records, and disenrollment data from carrier portals to reconcile true cost per persistently enrolled member across all acquisition channels. The engine accounts for OEP disenrollment rates by channel, AHIP and compliance overhead, aggregator referral fees, and agent time per enrollment — calculating a fully loaded cost per member retained at 90 and 365 days. Directives are issued at the campaign level with confidence scores and 30-day retest.

Find Out What You're Actually Paying Per Retained Member

The 30-Day Distortion Audit reconciles your last AEP campaign data across all cost layers — including OEP disenrollment, clawbacks, compliance overhead, and aggregator fees your dashboard never shows. Channel-by-channel cost per retained member. No cost, no commitment.

Request the Free Audit