Categories: VA Benefits

VA Aid & Attendance

VA Aid and Attendance is a means-tested benefit available for veteran’s with a non-service connected disability. It is frequently used by aging veterans to pay for long-term care. The benefit is available veterans who served 90 or more days of active duty with at least one day of service during a wartime period, and who have an other than dishonorable discharge.

The 2016 benefit rate is $1,788 for a single veteran, $2,120 for a veteran with a spouse, and $1,149 for a surviving spouse. These rate will increase by 0.3% for 2017 due to a Cost-of-Living Adjustment. These are maximum A&A benefit rates. To receive the maximum rate, you must need the aid of another person to perform personal functions in everyday living, such as bathing, feeding, dressing, toileting, adjusting prosthetic devices, or protecting yourself from the hazards of everydasy environment, or you must be bedridden, or you must be in a nursing home for a mental or physical condition, or you must be nearly blind. You must also have Income for VA Purposes (IVAP) that is below the benefit rate.

IVAP is income reduced by unreimbursed medical expenses. The first 5% of medical expenses are disregarded. After that, necessary medical expenses reduce your income dollar for dollar for VA purposes. Since VA A&A is a federal program, information about the program from other parts of the country is informative. A good description of the program appears on the website for the California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform at the following link: http://www.canhr.org/factsheets/misc_fs/html/fs_aid_&_attendance.htm

Published by
David L. McGuffey

Recent Posts

What happens if I don’t fund my Qualified Income Trust?

Qualified Income Trusts (also known as Miller Trusts or a QIT) are necessary when the…

3 months ago

Changes in How Trusts are Taxed

Trusts, like everyone else, pay taxes when they earn income or sell capital assets for…

3 months ago

What is a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust?

People often visit us and ask about using a trust to protect assets in the…

4 months ago

QLACS Update

Last year we wrote about qualified longevity annuity contracts, sometimes referred to as QLACs. On…

4 months ago

Trusts and Medicaid: Protecting Assets

People regularly ask us whether they should use a trust to protect assets in case…

7 months ago

Elle

We haven't posted much lately because we've been busier than a one-armed paper-hanger, but we…

11 months ago