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Can I Use My Aetna Healthy Benefits Card for Gas? A 2026 Guide for Seniors

Written By: William Rivers
Reviewed By: William Rivers
Published: May 22, 2026
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Yes, you can use your Aetna Healthy Benefits Card for gas if your card includes the Extra Supports Wallet, which is offered on certain Aetna Medicare Advantage plans for members with a qualifying chronic condition. If your card only carries an OTC Wallet allowance, gas purchases are not approved, and the swipe will decline. According to Aetna's 2026 plan announcement, 82% of Medicare-eligible beneficiaries have access to a $0 monthly premium Aetna MA plan this year, and all Dual Eligible Special Needs Plan (D-SNP) members receive an Extra Benefits Card with monthly wallet allowances. 

This guide walks through which Aetna cards cover gas in 2026, how to use the card at the pump, what the IRS allows if you have an Aetna FSA card instead, and how caregivers can confirm a parent's coverage.

Key Takeaways

  • Yes, but only some cards: Aetna Healthy Benefits Cards with an Extra Supports Wallet can be used to pay for gas directly at the pump in 2026.
  • D-SNP plans qualify first: Members in Aetna Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans automatically receive an Extra Benefits Card with monthly wallet allowances.
  • Chronic condition required: The Extra Supports Wallet upgrade for gas, transportation, and utilities is tied to a qualifying chronic condition under federal SSBCI rules.
  • OTC-only cards cannot pay for fuel: If your card has only an OTC Wallet, gas purchases are not approved, and the pump transaction will decline immediately.
  • FSA and HRA cards block fuel: Employer Aetna FSA and HRA cards reject gas station purchases at the pump because fuel merchant codes are not health-related.
  • Medical mileage reimbursement available: The IRS 2026 standard medical mileage rate is 20.5 cents per mile for trips to and from qualified medical care.
  • Always check your Evidence of Coverage: Wallet types, allowance amounts, and approved categories vary by plan and state, so review your plan's EOC before swiping.

Which Aetna Card Determines Whether You Can Buy Gas?

Your eligibility to buy gas comes down to which "wallet" is loaded onto your Aetna Healthy Benefits Card. The Extra Supports Wallet covers gas at the pump, public transportation, rideshare services, utility bills, healthy foods, and personal care items. An OTC Wallet only covers approved over-the-counter health products. Same card design, different rules behind it.

Aetna issues the Extra Benefits Card to most Medicare Advantage Dual Eligible Special Needs Plan (D-SNP) members and some Chronic Condition Special Needs Plan (C-SNP) members. The card itself looks identical regardless of plan, but the spending categories loaded onto it vary based on your specific plan and whether you qualify for additional support under federal SSBCI rules. Aetna's 2026 plan documentation confirms that D-SNP members with a qualifying chronic condition see their OTC Wallet upgraded to an Extra Supports Wallet that includes transportation and utilities.

What this means in plain terms: if you try to swipe an OTC-only card at a gas pump, the transaction will decline. That same card with an Extra Supports Wallet upgrade goes through. The card's appearance never changes, so the only way to know what your card covers is to check your Evidence of Coverage (EOC) or log in to the CVS Health Solutions portal at CVS.com/Aetna to see your active wallets.

How the Aetna Medicare Extra Benefits Card Works in 2026

The 2026 Aetna Medicare Extra Benefits Card is a single prepaid Mastercard administered by CVS Health that consolidates multiple benefit allowances into separate "wallets." Each wallet covers a different category of approved spending. Allowance amounts reload on the first day of each benefit period, and unused funds typically do not carry over.

The card is issued automatically to enrollees in eligible Aetna Medicare Advantage plans. According to Aetna's official Extra Benefits Card guidance, the Extra Supports Wallet is the most flexible of the wallet options and can be used in-store, online, by phone, and at the gas pump. The exact monthly allowance depends on your specific plan and service area. One Aetna 2025 D-SNP plan documented a $125 monthly Extra Supports Wallet allowance, while other plans loaded different amounts based on local benefit structures.

Important detail from Aetna's published guidance: even with the Extra Supports Wallet, you must pay for gas directly at the pump. The card does not work if you swipe it inside the gas station convenience store. The authorization system reads the gas pump's specific merchant category code to approve the transaction. Walk inside, and the system sees a different code, which the card will not honor.

For 2026, Aetna consolidated the program into one card administered by CVS Health, with a single customer service number and one app for balance checks across all wallets. Aetna offers Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug plans in 43 states plus Washington, D.C., this year, reaching roughly 57 million Medicare-eligible beneficiaries.

Which Aetna Cards Cover Gas? A Side-by-Side Comparison

Six different Aetna card configurations exist across Medicare and employer benefit programs, and only one of them actually authorizes gas at the pump. Here is the side-by-side breakdown for 2026 cardholders.

Card / Wallet TypeCovers Gas?Who QualifiesWhat It Covers
Aetna OTC WalletNoStandard D-SNP membersApproved over-the-counter health and wellness products
Aetna CVS OTC WalletNoSome Medicare Advantage membersApproved OTC products at CVS retail and online
Aetna Extra Supports WalletYes (at pump)D-SNP or C-SNP members with a qualifying chronic conditionGas at the pump, public transit, rideshare, utilities, healthy foods, personal care, OTC items
Aetna Healthy Foods WalletNoChronic-condition members on eligible plansSNAP-approved fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy, and pantry staples
Aetna Medical Expense WalletNoSome Medicare Advantage plansApproved medical copays, deductibles, and out-of-pocket costs
Aetna FSA or HRA Card (employer)NoActive or retired employees with FSA or HRA coverageApproved medical expenses only; gas declined at the pump

How to Use Your Aetna Healthy Benefits Card at the Gas Pump

Using your Aetna Healthy Benefits Card at the pump takes five steps, and the card must be activated before its first use. Here is the exact process for cardholders who have an Extra Support Wallet on their plan.

  1. Confirm your wallet first. Log in to CVS.com/Aetna or call 1-877-204-1817 to verify that your card has an active Extra Supports Wallet with a positive balance.
  2. Check your balance. Wallet allowances reload monthly and do not always carry over. The CVS OTC Health Solutions app shows your real-time balance.
  3. Pay at the pump, not inside. Swipe or insert your Aetna Healthy Benefits Card at the pump itself. The system reads the pump's merchant code and authorizes the transaction. If you go inside the convenience store, the purchase will not process.
  4. Enter the card's ZIP or PIN. Most pumps prompt for a billing ZIP code. Use the ZIP on file with Aetna for the cardholder. Some pumps may request the PIN issued with the card.
  5. Keep the receipt. Aetna and CVS Health may occasionally request documentation, especially if a transaction is flagged for review.

If the transaction declines, the three most common causes are an OTC-only wallet (gas is not approved on that wallet), an empty monthly balance, or an unactivated card.

Key Terms to Know: D-SNP, C-SNP, SSBCI, and Wallets

Several Medicare acronyms decide whether you qualify for the gas benefit. Understanding these five terms helps you check eligibility quickly and avoid the most common cardholder confusion.

D-SNP (Dual Eligible Special Needs Plan): A Medicare Advantage plan for people enrolled in both Medicare and Medicaid. All Aetna D-SNP members receive an Extra Benefits Card, though wallet contents vary based on chronic condition status.

C-SNP (Chronic Condition Special Needs Plan): A Medicare Advantage plan for members with specific severe or disabling chronic conditions such as diabetes, chronic heart failure, or chronic lung disorders. Some C-SNPs include an Extra Support Wallet.

SSBCI (Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill): A federal benefit category that lets Medicare Advantage plans cover non-medical needs (gas, utilities, food, transportation) for members with qualifying chronic illnesses. SSBCI rules govern who gets the Extra Supports Wallet.

Wallet: Aetna's term for a spending allowance loaded onto the Extra Benefits Card for a specific category of approved purchases.

VBID (Value-Based Insurance Design): A federal model that allowed Medicare Advantage plans to offer some non-medical benefits more broadly. CMS ended VBID at the close of 2025, shifting many flex-card benefits to SSBCI for 2026, which changed eligibility rules for some cardholders.

According to KFF's 2026 Medicare Advantage analysis, 87% of Special Needs Plans offer at least one SSBCI benefit in 2026, compared with 12% of individual Medicare Advantage plans. That gap is the main reason D-SNP and C-SNP enrollees are far more likely to have gas coverage than members of standard Medicare Advantage plans.

What If You Have an Aetna FSA or HRA Card Instead?

An Aetna Flexible Spending Account (FSA) or Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) card cannot be used at a gas pump. Federal IRS rules and merchant category code restrictions block fuel purchases on these cards, even if the trip itself is medical.

If you receive your Aetna card through an employer or a retiree benefit, the card runs through a different authorization system than the Medicare Extra Benefits Card. FSA and HRA cards only approve transactions at health-related merchant category codes (MCCs). Gas stations carry MCC 5541 or 5542, neither of which appears on the IRS-approved list, so the swipe is automatically declined at the pump.

For caregivers using their own employer FSA to help cover a parent's medical travel, this distinction matters. Even though the IRS allows medical mileage as a qualified expense, the FSA card itself will not authorize the gas purchase in real time at the station. The workaround is reimbursement after the fact, which the next section covers in detail.

How to Get Reimbursed for Medical Travel Without Swiping at the Pump

You can claim out-of-pocket gas costs or use the IRS standard medical mileage rate for trips that qualify as medical travel under IRS Publication 502. For 2026, the IRS medical mileage rate is 20.5 cents per mile, down half a cent from 2025.

Reimbursement is available through your FSA or HRA administrator after the trip, not at the pump. IRS Publication 502 sets the rule: transportation expenses qualify only if the travel is "primarily for and essential to medical care." That includes appointments, diagnostic visits, treatments, and prescribed therapies. It does not include trips to and from work, even if a medical condition makes the commute difficult, vacations taken for general health, or routine personal errands.

For 2026 specifically, the IRS announced in Notice 2026-10 that the medical mileage rate is 20.5 cents per mile. Taxpayers may choose between this standard rate or actual gas and oil expenses (depreciation and insurance are excluded for medical mileage). Parking fees and tolls are deductible on top of either method.

To file an FSA or HRA reimbursement claim for medical travel:

  1. Pay for gas using a personal credit card, debit card, or cash.
  2. Track each medical trip with date, starting address, medical facility name, and total miles.
  3. Save fuel receipts if you plan to claim actual expenses instead of the standard mileage rate.
  4. Submit the documentation through your Aetna benefits administrator's portal.
  5. Funds are then deposited into your personal bank account or mailed by check, depending on your enrollment settings.

A practical note for seniors with frequent medical visits: a mileage log app on a smartphone often produces cleaner documentation than handwritten notes, since the IRS expects records made at or near the time of each trip rather than reconstructed later.

A Caregiver's Walk-Through: Helping a Parent Use the Card

For adult children helping a parent with an Aetna Medicare Advantage plan, three checks resolve most cardholder confusion: confirming the active wallets, activating the card, and walking through one practice transaction. Most card-related calls to Aetna member services come down to these three items.

In our review of common Aetna member experience patterns, the most frequent cause of a declined gas transaction is not eligibility. It is a card activation. New members receive the card by mail with an activation sticker. Until the cardholder calls 1-877-204-1817, scans the QR code, or activates online at Aetna.NationsBenefits.com/Activate, no wallet balance is available for use.

For caregivers, the practical sequence looks like this. First, log in to the parents' CVS.com/Aetna account or call together, and confirm which wallets are active and what the monthly allowances are. Second, write the wallet list and balances on a small index card that the parent can keep in a wallet or purse. Third, accompany the parent on the first gas-pump use if possible, since the difference between "swipe at the pump" and "swipe inside" is the source of most failed first attempts.

A common scenario: a senior with a D-SNP plan and well-managed Type 2 diabetes has the Extra Supports Wallet but tries to pay inside the convenience store because the pump's prompt feels intimidating. The transaction declines, the senior assumes the card "does not work for gas," and the benefit goes unused for months. The fix is a five-minute walkthrough at the pump.

If the parents' plan has changed for 2026, the Annual Notice of Change letter (mailed each fall) lists wallet changes. Caregivers should review this letter alongside the parent before the new plan year begins, especially after the federal VBID model ended at the close of 2025, which prompted shifts in supplemental benefit structures across most plans. 

Final Answer: Gas Is Covered Only With the Right Aetna Wallet

Gas coverage through an Aetna card is not automatic. In 2026, the safest rule is simple: check whether your Aetna Medicare Extra Benefits Card includes the Extra Supports Wallet before trying to pay at the pump. If your card only has an OTC Wallet, the transaction will not cover fuel. Review your Evidence of Coverage, log in at CVS.com/Aetna, or call the number on your card to confirm your active wallets and monthly balance.

For a broader look at how Aetna plans structure senior benefits, compare plan types, and choose coverage that fits your needs, read Senior Strong’s guide to the best Aetna Medicare Advantage plans for seniors

Frequently Asked Questions

Does every Aetna Medicare member get a card that covers gas?

No. Only Aetna Medicare Advantage members on D-SNP or eligible C-SNP plans receive the Extra Benefits Card. Of those, only members with a qualifying chronic condition receive the Extra Supports Wallet that covers gas. Standard Medicare Advantage and Medicare Supplement (Medigap) plans do not include this benefit.

What chronic conditions qualify for the Extra Supports Wallet?

Aetna's qualifying conditions follow federal SSBCI rules. Common qualifying chronic conditions include diabetes, chronic heart failure, cardiovascular disorders, chronic lung disorders such as COPD, chronic kidney disease, and chronic and disabling mental health conditions. Eligibility is verified through medical records when you enroll.

How much can I spend on gas with the Extra Supports Wallet?

Monthly allowance amounts vary by plan and service area. Aetna 2025 D-SNP plans documented monthly Extra Supports Wallet allowances of around $125, though specific amounts differ by state and plan year. Check your 2026 Evidence of Coverage or call Aetna member services for your exact balance.

Can I use the Aetna Healthy Benefits Card for Uber or Lyft?

Yes, if your card includes the Extra Supports Wallet. Aetna confirms that the wallet covers rideshare services such as Uber and Lyft, public transit, and taxis. The card is added as a payment method inside the rideshare app or used at a transit fare machine that accepts Mastercard.

Does the card cover gas if I drive a friend to their medical appointment?

The Extra Supports Wallet is tied to your card and your name. Using it to fuel your own vehicle while transporting someone else is generally permitted as long as you are the cardholder. The card cannot be loaned to another person or used by anyone other than the named member.

What happens to my unused Aetna gas allowance at month's end?

For most Aetna wallets, unused monthly balances do not roll over to the next month. The benefit period resets on the first day of each calendar month. Check your specific plan's rules in your Evidence of Coverage, since some plans use quarterly or annual benefit periods.

If my card is declined at the pump, what should I do?

Call 1-877-204-1817 to verify your wallet status, balance, and activation. Most declines come down to one of three causes: a card that has not been activated, an OTC-only wallet that does not cover gas, or a wallet with a $0 balance for the current month.

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William Rivers is an editor with a master’s degree in Human Services Counseling at Maine State University. He has more than 20 years of experience working in the senior healthcare industry.
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