WASHINGTON — The Department of Veterans Affairs is extending our financial hardship suspension on benefit debts, meaning that Veterans who request assistance will not have to pay benefit debts until Dec. 31.

This relief option, which was established to help Veterans through the COVID-19 pandemic, had been set to expire on Sept. 30. Benefit debts include debts related to disability compensation, non-service-connected pension, and education benefits.

Beginning in September, debt notification letters will be mailed to affected Veterans notifying them of the extended hardship suspension option, as well as extended debt repayment plans, waivers and compromises.

“Helping Veterans manage, pay off, and — in some cases — eliminate their debt is one of our top priorities,” said VA Secretary Denis McDonough. “Extending this hardship suspension is a key part of that critical effort, and it will help ease the burden for Vets who are living with debt.”

In recent years, VA has made real progress toward helping Veterans manage their debts. These efforts include:

  • Canceling copayments for medical care and pharmacy services from April 2020 to September 2021, which saved more than 1.5 million Veterans approximately 1 billion dollars.
  • Publishing a final rule that reduced the number of Veterans referred to credit agencies by 99 percent, meaning that medical debt will no longer impact those Veterans’ credit scores. 
  • Transitioning from a complex paper application to enhanced online tools where Veterans can learn about what they owe and apply for relief. 
  • Improving the review process for debt forgiveness by implementing a simpler income threshold to qualify for relief. 
  • Streamlining the Veterans Health Administration debt waiver process for medical debts, requiring less paperwork for Veterans while expediting processing times and expanding relief eligibility.
  • Transferring education tuition and fees debt responsibility from Veterans to schools in January 2021.
  • Establishing a phone hotline in October 2021 for Veterans Health Administration clinicians to call on behalf of Veterans who appear to be experiencing significant anxiety related to their benefit debt.
  • Temporary eliminating the requirement for a Financial Status Report to receive a hardship determination.

Veterans and beneficiaries can manage their debt online, or call 800-827-0648 with questions regarding benefit overpayments.

For information about medical care and pharmacy copayment debt, Veterans and beneficiaries can contact the Health Resource Center at 866-400-1238.

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Reporters and media outlets with questions or comments should contact the Office of Media Relations at vapublicaffairs@va.gov

Veterans with questions about their health care and benefits (including GI Bill). Questions, updates and documents can be submitted online.

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