Cost & Medical Disclaimer: Prices listed are U.S. estimates based on publicly available data and hearing health industry surveys as of 2024–2025. Actual costs vary by location, provider, hearing aid brand, and your individual hearing needs. This article was reviewed by Dr. Susan Chen, AuD for medical accuracy. This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional audiology advice. Always consult a licensed audiologist or hearing healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment decisions.

What does a root-canal of paperwork get you? If you’re a federal employee, it gets you one of the better-kept secrets in hearing care: a lot of FEHB plans actually cover hearing aids, and quite a few people on those plans never realize it.

The Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) program isn’t a single plan — it’s a marketplace of dozens of carriers. Coverage ranges from generous to nonexistent, so the trick is reading your specific plan.

FEHB isn’t one benefit — it’s many

FEHB covers more than 8 million federal employees, retirees, and family members, managed by the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM). Because each carrier sets its own terms, hearing aid coverage varies plan to plan. Some popular national plans include a hearing aid allowance; others fold it into bare-bones coverage or skip it.

Typical FEHB hearing aid benefits look like this in 2026:

FEHB Plan FeatureTypical Range
Hearing aid allowance$1,000 – $2,500 per ear
Benefit periodEvery 3–5 years
Hearing examOften covered in full
Your remaining costDifference above the allowance

So if your plan allows $2,500 toward a $4,500 pair, you’d owe roughly $2,000 — a real dent in the bill, but not a free ride.

How to find your plan’s hearing benefit

Don’t guess. Each FEHB plan publishes a detailed brochure every year, and the hearing aid benefit is spelled out in plain language. Here’s the fast path:

  1. Pull your plan’s current-year brochure from the OPM website.
  2. Search the document for “hearing aid.”
  3. Note the dollar allowance, the benefit period, and whether you need to use in-network providers.

In-network rules matter. Many FEHB plans pay more — or only pay at all — when you buy through a contracted audiology network. Going out of network can wipe out the benefit.

Key Takeaway

Many FEHB plans quietly cover hearing aids at $1,000 to $2,500 per ear every few years, but the benefit is buried in your plan brochure. Search the brochure for “hearing aid,” check the benefit period, and use in-network providers to actually collect it.

Open Season is your chance to upgrade

Here’s a move most feds miss. If your current plan skimps on hearing coverage and you know you’ll need devices soon, FEHB Open Season (typically each fall) lets you switch to a plan with a stronger hearing benefit. A plan offering a $2,500-per-ear allowance can pay for itself many times over if you’re buying a pair.

Compare brochures during Open Season specifically on the hearing aid line if it matters to you that year.

⚠ Watch Out For

Don’t buy hearing aids the week before switching plans. Benefit periods and effective dates can leave you in a gap where neither plan pays. Confirm your new plan’s effective date and benefit reset before scheduling a purchase.

What FEHB won’t cover

Even good FEHB plans rarely cover the full cost of premium devices. With premium pairs running $4,500 to $6,500, the allowance covers a chunk, not the whole thing. Our average hearing aid cost breakdown shows where the money goes, and why hearing aids are so expensive explains the pricing.

For mild loss, you might skip the claim entirely. OTC hearing aids cost a few hundred dollars and don’t require any benefit at all.

Retirees and FEHB

If you’ve retired from federal service and kept FEHB, your hearing aid benefit usually carries over — and it can pair with Medicare. Because Original Medicare doesn’t cover hearing aids (see does Medicare cover hearing aids), an FEHB allowance becomes even more valuable in retirement. For other gap-filling options, see hearing-loss financial assistance.

The bottom line

Federal employees often have hearing aid coverage they don’t know about. Pull your plan brochure, search for “hearing aid,” and confirm the allowance and network rules. If your benefit is weak, use Open Season to switch. A $2,500-per-ear allowance is one of the best deals in employer-sponsored hearing coverage — but only if you actually claim it.

Frequently Asked Questions

HearingAidCostGuide Editorial Team

Hearing Health Writer

Our writers collaborate with licensed audiologists to ensure all cost and health-related content is accurate, current, and useful for Americans navigating hearing aid and audiology expenses.