Recognizing the different ways Veteran homelessness presents and how VA services offer pathways to stability

Homeless doesn’t always mean not having a roof over your head. Homelessness can be hidden.

It can mean frequent moves between friends’ homes, living in a car or short-term stays to escape unsafe situations at home. Veterans experiencing homelessness may be parents trying to protect their children, individuals sleeping in vehicles or women fleeing domestic violence. All face instability that affects their physical health, mental well-being, and ability to move forward.

Forms of Veteran homelessness

For some Veteran families, homelessness shows up as house-hopping. Parents and children may move frequently between friends or relatives, which can create stress, disrupt routines and make it difficult to maintain consistency in employment or schooling.

Other Veterans may rely on their vehicles as their only form of shelter. Living in a car or van often keeps individuals out of sight of traditional support services, making their needs harder to identify.

Rural Veterans face an additional layer of hardship. Limited shelter availability and long travel distances to care can leave them isolated from resources that could improve their situation.

Veteran women fleeing intimate partner violence often experience homelessness in even more concealed ways. Many leave their homes with little notice, relying on temporary stays with friends or short-term arrangements to remain safe.

View our infographic on hidden forms of homelessness.

VA programs that provide pathways to stability

VA offers a wide range of housing and support services to help homeless Veterans regain stability, help and hope. Interim housing programs provide temporary shelter while Veterans work toward permanent solutions. Health Care for Homeless Veterans (HCHV)and Grant and Per Diem (GPD) programs combine housing with case management and clinical care to stabilize Veterans during critical transitions.

Permanent housing support through HUD-VASH and Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) pairs rental assistance with comprehensive case management. These programs help Veterans not only find housing but maintain it long-term, reducing the risk of returning to unstable conditions.

For Veterans impacted by domestic violence, the Intimate Partner Violence Assistance Program (IPVAP) is a trauma-informed program providing confidential support, counseling, safety planning and referrals to specialized services.

The Rural Housing Initiative strengthens support for Veterans in remote areas through collaborations with USDA and HUD. These partnerships expand access to loans, grants and housing assistance tailored to the unique realities of rural living.

VA outreach teams also play a crucial role, meeting Veterans where they are: on the streets, in shelters, or through community partners to connect them with housing, health care and employment resources designed to promote lasting stability.

How you can help connect Veterans to resources

Everyone can play a role in supporting Veterans experiencing homelessness. If you notice a Veteran who may be struggling with housing instability, start by acknowledging their situation with compassion and respect. Encourage them to reach out to VA or, with their consent, offer to help make that first connection to the National Call Center for Homeless Veterans at 877-424-3838.

Sharing information about available services, creating supportive environments and reducing stigma surrounding homelessness can make a meaningful difference in ending Veteran homelessness. By recognizing the less visible forms of housing instability and amplifying awareness, communities can help ensure no Veteran is left without a safe and stable place to call home.

Learn about VA programs   

  • If you are a Veteran who is homeless or at risk for homelessness or need to connect with a Veterans justice outreach specialist, call the National Call Center for Homeless Veterans at 877-424-3838.   
  • Visit the VA Homeless Programs to learn about housing initiatives and other programs for Veterans exiting homelessness.  
  • Get involved with housing homeless Veterans.  

Leave a comment

The comments section is for opinions and feedback on this particular article; this is not a customer support channel. If you are looking for assistance, please visit Ask VA or call 1-800-698-2411. Please, never put personally identifiable information (SSAN, address, phone number, etc.) or protected health information into the form — it will be deleted for your protection.

6 Comments

  1. robin smith January 7, 2026 at 19:57

    Nice article for awareness. As a veteran who came through the SSVF program 13 years ago. To work for an SSVF provider for the last 13 years, to being inducted into the NYS Veterans Hall of Fame, receiving countless citations for service, serving as the Chairman of Veteran Services within my community board. It is my job and my purpose to help Veterans achieve their goals and live with dignity. My service did not end when I left the military. It is ongoing.

  2. Michael Wayne Austin December 25, 2025 at 20:42

    Am going through problems with my landlord and property management refusing to renew my lease and unfair treatment on the property I have documented also overcharged rent

  3. Donald Anderson December 24, 2025 at 01:44

    Great job you all are doing helping us Veterans I commend every single one of you with the highest Praise I be calling the National phone number soon to try and get some information on Helping Veterans in Rural Areas, how to get a VA loan to buy an acre of land get a trailer and live the rest of My Days in PEACE!!! Bravo too you all and Best Wishes for Happy Holiday even though I gonna be alone and totally BROKE,but it’s nothing New I’ll survive just as I did in the Marine Corp but in there at least I had the Comradary, and Company of My Fellow Marines and Brothers!! Once again Thank you for every single little thing you all do for US, GOD Bless!!!

  4. M ballezza December 23, 2025 at 17:21

    Veteran women should be changed to veterans. Domestic violence, while predominantly towards women, is not exclusively. Saying veterans fleeing domestic violence works fine to raise awareness, saying female veterans or women veterans makes it seem like they need an identifier, like they’re not regular veterans when the topic has no bearing on biology. It also pushes any male vets away, makes them think they can’t be a victim of domestic violence because they’re male, which makes them keep their mouths shut, which makes the numbers even more skewed

  5. VINCENT D MANCUSI December 22, 2025 at 21:32

    Too bad too bad you have to be totally broke and totally disabled to get any help with when you’re homeless and and being accused of of legal items like domestic violence or legal things against the veterans try to come up with some other things other than just making it sound good

  6. Kimberly LaPoint December 22, 2025 at 16:25

    Great Article Shawn! As A Single Mom To 3 Military Service Children, We, Too, Experienced Homelessness Due To The Tolls of War. Unfortunately, There Was No Help For Us, And We Found Ourselves Living In Our Car. I Hope Support Systems Will Become Available For Survivors Of Living Service Members As The Trauma Of War Devastated Our Family.

Comments are closed.

More Stories