Since the start of the Medicare program in 1966, the 50 states, the District of Columbia
            (DC), and the U.S. territories have had the option to enter into agreements with the
            Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to enroll certain individuals who are
            dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid into Medicare and pay the premiums on their
            behalf (known as “state buy-in”). See the CMS Manual
               for State Payment of Medicare Premiums, chapter 1, sections 1.0 and 1.2.
         
         For an individual who is determined eligible for, but not yet enrolled in Medicare,
            state buy-in serves to enroll the individual in Medicare Part A and/or B and directs
            the federal government to bill the state for the individual’s premiums. For an individual
            who is already enrolled in Medicare, state buy-in enables the federal government to
            bill the state for the individual’s Medicare premiums and stop collecting the premiums
            from the individual through deductions from their monthly Social Security, Railroad
            Retirement Board (RRB), or Civil Service Retirement benefits, or through CMS direct
            premium billing (Form CMS-500).