VA Benefits That Pay for Home Care: Complete Guide

Six VA programs pay for in-home care for veterans and surviving spouses — most families qualify for at least one and don't know it.

Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders

3 min read

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Updated May 13, 2026

A senior veteran seated in his home — the kind of setting where VA-paid home care delivers daily.

Six VA programs pay for home care in 2026: Aid & Attendance, the Homemaker / Home Health Aide (H/HHA) program, Veteran-Directed Care (VDC), the Geriatrics and Extended Care (GEC) program, the Housebound benefit, and PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly). Most eligible veterans qualify for at least one, and many qualify for multiple programs simultaneously. Combined, these benefits typically cover $1,500 to $4,000 a month of home care costs.

This guide walks through each program — who qualifies, what it pays, and how to combine them. For the broader picture, see our pillar guide on veterans home care or the step-by-step application instructions in how to apply for VA Aid & Attendance.

1. VA Aid & Attendance

The most-used VA home care benefit. A monthly pension supplement for wartime veterans and surviving spouses who need help with daily activities. In 2026, the maximum benefit is roughly $2,800 a month for a married veteran. Income- and asset-based eligibility. Application typically takes 6 to 12 months.

Best for: families where the veteran or spouse is medically frail and household income is modest. Read the application guide at how to apply for VA Aid & Attendance.

2. Homemaker / Home Health Aide (H/HHA) program

The VA contracts directly with home-care agencies to provide non-medical home care for veterans enrolled in VA healthcare who have clinical need for help with activities of daily living. No wartime service requirement and no income test. Coverage varies by region and agency capacity.

Best for: any enrolled veteran needing ongoing daily support. The veteran’s VA primary-care team initiates the referral.

3. Veteran-Directed Care (VDC)

Eligible veterans receive a monthly budget (typically $2,500 to $4,000 a month, varies by region) that they can spend however the care plan allows — including hiring family members, friends, or independent caregivers as paid employees. The VA handles the payroll through a third-party financial management service.

Best for: families that want flexibility, including paying a spouse or adult child as a caregiver. Ask the VA primary-care team about VDC availability in your state.

4. Geriatrics and Extended Care (GEC) services

An umbrella for shorter-term VA-paid services including Adult Day Health Care, in-home respite care for family caregivers, hospice care, and skilled home health (RN visits, PT, OT, ST). Coverage is broader than most veterans realize.

Best for: any enrolled veteran needing layered care — most families use GEC services alongside Aid & Attendance or H/HHA. Initiated by the VA primary-care team.

5. Housebound benefit

A monthly pension supplement for veterans who are substantially confined to their home due to permanent disability. In 2026, the maximum benefit is roughly $1,500 a month. You can receive Aid & Attendance OR Housebound — not both — but Aid & Attendance pays more, so most clinically eligible veterans choose A&A.

Best for: veterans permanently homebound but not requiring hands-on daily-living help (which would qualify them for the larger Aid & Attendance benefit).

6. PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly)

A joint Medicare-Medicaid-VA program for dual-eligible seniors (typically 55+) that bundles medical care, home care, adult day care, and prescriptions into one coordinated package. Available in 30+ states. The VA contributes for eligible veterans.

Best for: low-income veterans who qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid and live near a PACE program. Find your local PACE program at Medicare.gov.

How to combine VA benefits

Most families layer two or three programs. Common combinations:

  • Aid & Attendance + H/HHA — A&A cash supplements the VA-contracted home care from H/HHA.
  • VDC + GEC respite — VDC budget funds the primary caregiver; GEC respite covers the family caregiver’s breaks.
  • Aid & Attendance + Tricare for Life — A&A funds non-medical care; Tricare covers Medicare-eligible clinical care.

A VA-accredited claims agent will map the best combination for your veteran’s specific situation. Read about Tricare and VA benefits for in-home care for the Medicare-overlap details.

What’s the next step?

A free 15-minute eligibility screening will tell you which programs your veteran qualifies for and which combination funds care fastest. Talk to a VeteransHomeCare advisor when you’re ready.

Frequently asked questions

Can I receive Aid & Attendance and H/HHA at the same time?

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Yes. Aid & Attendance is a cash pension supplement; H/HHA is a direct VA contract for home care services. They're separate benefits with different eligibility tests, and many veterans qualify for both. The A&A cash typically pays for hours beyond the H/HHA-contracted weekly hours, or for premium services like 24-hour shifts. A VA-accredited claims agent will coordinate the application sequence.

Does VA home care cover hospice?

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Yes. The VA's hospice benefit covers in-home hospice care for veterans with a terminal diagnosis (typically 6-month prognosis or less). Coverage is comprehensive — RN visits, hospice aide, social worker, chaplain, medical equipment, and medications. The veteran's VA primary-care team initiates the referral. Families enrolled in hospice also continue receiving Aid & Attendance and other pension benefits.

How does VDC compare to hiring an independent caregiver?

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VDC pays you a budget that the VA-contracted financial management service uses to hire your chosen caregiver as a W-2 employee — payroll taxes, workers' comp insurance, and reporting are all handled. Hiring an independent caregiver yourself puts all of that compliance burden on you. VDC is a much cleaner path for paying a family member, even if you have to wait a few months for the program to be approved.

Can a veteran qualify for VA home care without enrolling in VA healthcare?

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Some benefits — Aid & Attendance, Housebound, and survivor benefits — don't require VA healthcare enrollment. Others — H/HHA, VDC, GEC, hospice — require the veteran to be enrolled in VA healthcare. Enrollment is free for most veterans and is worth completing whether or not you're currently using VA medical services. The enrollment unlocks access to multiple programs simultaneously.

Does VA home care affect Medicaid eligibility?

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Aid & Attendance is income for Medicaid purposes in most states, which can push some veterans over the Medicaid income threshold. However, the medical expense deduction usually preserves Medicaid eligibility when home care costs are documented. Some states' Medicaid waiver programs specifically count A&A income differently. A geriatric care manager familiar with both systems is worth the consultation fee here.

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About the author

James Carter, MSW, Accredited VA Claims Agent

Senior Veterans Care Advisor

James is a U.S. Army veteran and a licensed Master of Social Work who has spent 12 years helping wartime veterans and their spouses navigate VA benefits, Aid & Attendance applications, and the transition into in-home care. He writes about the practical mechanics of veteran-specific home care — what the VA pays for, what it doesn't, and how to get a claim approved on the first try.

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