About VA health benefits | Veterans Affairs (2024)

If you qualify for VA health care, you’ll receive coverage for the services you need to help you get—and stay—healthy. Learn more about your health care benefits.

Learn how to apply for VA health care now

What care and services does VA health care cover?

Each Veteran’s medical benefits package is unique. Yours will include care and services to help:

  • Treat illnesses and injuries
  • Prevent future health problems
  • Improve your ability to function
  • Enhance your quality of life

All Veterans receive coverage for most care and services, but only some will qualify for added benefits like dental care. The full list of your covered benefits depends on:

  • Your priority group, and
  • The advice of your VA primary care provider (your main doctor, nurse practitioner, or physician’s assistant), and
  • The medical standards for treating any health conditions you may have

Learn more about priority groups

You should also know that being signed up for VA health care meets your Affordable Care Act (ACA) health coverage requirement of having “minimum essential health coverage.” We’ll update this site if the ACA changes with new laws.
Learn more about the ACA, VA, and you

Note: We want to make sure you understand how we use and disclose your medical information and how to access your information yourself. Download our notice of privacy practices (PDF)

What if I’m just separating from active duty and don’t know where to start?

Call us at877-222-8387 (TTY: 711).We’re here Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. ET.

We can help you learn about and apply for VA health care benefits. We can answer any questions you may have, process your application over the phone, and help you schedule your first VA medical appointment.

Learn about transitioning from TRICARE to VA health care

More about your medical benefits package

We cover preventive care services, like:

  • Health exams (including gender-specific exams)
  • Health education (including nutrition education)
  • Immunization against infectious diseases (like flu shots)
  • Counseling on genetic diseases (diseases that run in families)

We cover inpatient hospital services, like:

  • Surgeries
  • Medical treatments
  • Kidney dialysis
  • Acute care (short-term treatment for a severe illness or injury or after surgery)
  • Specialized care (including organ transplants, intensive care for mental and physical conditions, and care for traumatic injuries)
    Review more VA medical and surgical specialty care services

We cover urgent and emergency care services, like:

  • Urgent or emergency care at some VA health facilities.
    Find a VA health facility near you
  • Urgent care for injuries and illnesses that need attention right away, but aren’t life threatening, aturgent care locations that are part of our contracted network. This may include care at a VA-approved:
    • Walk-in retail health clinicfor minorillnesses like a sore throat or earache
    • Urgent care facilityfor more pressing (but not life-threatening) illnesses or injuries that require treatment like splinting, casting, or wound care

    To use these services, you’ll need to be enrolled in VA health care, and you’ll needto have received care from us within the past 24 months. Be sure to tell the urgent care provider that you’re using the VA urgent care benefit when you arrive.
    Learn more about urgent care
    Get advice on choosing between urgent and emergency care
  • Emergency care in a non-VA hospital, clinic, or other medical setting—only under certain conditions. For us to consider covering non-VA emergency care for a non-service-connected condition, you’ll need to meet several requirements.
    Learn more about non-VA emergency medical care

We cover other services and needs, like:

  • Mental health services to treat certain issues like posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), military sexual trauma (MST), depression, and substance use problems.
    Learn more about mental health services
  • Assisted living and home health care (depending on your needs and income as well as space in the programs).
    Learn more about assisted living and home health care
  • Prescriptions written or approved by a VA doctor.
    Refill your prescriptions

We may cover services that your VA primary care provider concludes you need to support your treatment (called ancillary services), like:

  • Tests used to diagnose health conditions, including blood work, X-rays, and ultrasounds
  • Therapy and rehabilitation services, including physical therapy, vision rehab, and therapy for traumatic brain injury
  • Additional services, including prosthetic items, audiology (care for hearing loss), and radiation oncology (cancer care)

You may be able to get help with some non-medical services, like:

Contact the patient advocate at the VA medical center where you go for care. Your patient advocate can help you get foreign language or American Sign Language services to help you or your family members understand your medical or health care benefits.

To find out how to reach the patient advocate at your VA medical center, go to the website of the VA health care system that the medical center is part of. In the page’s navigation, click on “Patients & Visitors.” A submenu will appear. Select “Patient Information” and then “Customer Service.”
Find your medical center’s website

We cover routine eye exams and preventive tests. In some cases, you may get coverage for eyeglasses or services for blind or low-vision rehabilitation.
Learn more about vision care through VA

In certain cases, you may receive dental care as part of your VA health benefits.
Find out if you can get dental care through VA

As a Veteran, you may be able to get assisted living, residential (live-in), or home health care through VA.
Find out how to access these long-term care services

These services aren’tincluded in the VA medical benefits package under current regulations:

  • Cosmetic surgery, unless we conclude that it’s medically necessary (needed to prevent or treat a certain illness, injury, condition, disease, or symptoms)
  • Gender-affirming surgical interventions
    Learn more about gender-affirming surgery regulations on our patient care website
  • Health club or spa membership
  • Inpatient hospital or outpatient care if you’re a patient or inmate in a non-VA government agency institution, if that agency must provide the care or services by law
  • Medicines and medical devices that aren’t approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

Exception: You can get VA health care for medicines and medical devices that aren’t approved by the FDA if you’re in an approved clinical trial. This exception also applies if you’re seriously ill and your VA health care provider prescribes a new, unapproved medicine because there are no other comparable treatment options (called a compassionate use or expanded access exemption).

We’ll fill prescriptions by a non-VA community provider only if you meet all these requirements.

All of these must be true:

  • You’re enrolled in VA health care
  • You have an assigned VA primary care provider
  • You’ve given your VA provider your medical records from your non-VA provider
  • Your VA provider agrees with the prescription

Learn more about prescriptions from community providers

This will depend on factors like your income level, disability rating, and military service history. Most Veterans need to complete a financial assessment when they enroll. This helps us determine if you qualify for free VA health care.

Learn more about VA copays
Find out more about financial assessments

At VA, we take a team approach to health care—with you at the center. Research shows this kind of approach leads to better quality care, more satisfied patients, and fewer hospital visits.
Find out who will care for you when you become part of the VA health care program

When you sign up for VA health care, you become part of the country’s largest integrated health care system—with more than 1,200 care locations serving nearly 9 million Veterans each year.
Learn more about where you’ll get care

If you have other forms of health care coverage (like a private insurance plan, Medicare, Medicaid, or TRICARE), you can use VA health care benefits along with these plans.
Learn more about how VA works with other health insurance

Yes.

If you’re an eligible American Indian or Alaska Native Veteran

When you receive care throughan Indian Health Service facility or Tribal Health facility that has a reimbursement agreement withus:

  • You don’t need us to approve (or “preauthorize”) your care before you get treated,and
  • You don’t need to pay a VA copay

If you live in Alaska

You may be able to receive carethroughan Indian Health Service facility or Tribal Health facility even if you’re not an eligibleAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Veteran.

But, you’ll need to get preauthorization before you receive care, and you may need to pay a copay for your care.

Email the Indian Health Service and Tribal Health Health Program team for more information

Learn more about the Indian Health Service and Tribal Health Programs

Please call usat 877-222-8387. We’re here Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. ET. Or contact your state’s Veterans agency.

Yes. If you’re signed up for the VA health care program, you can manage your VA health and benefits online:

Refill your prescriptions
Send a secure message to your health care team

You can also check the status of a disability or pension claim online.
Check your claim status

Last updated:

About VA health benefits | Veterans Affairs (2024)

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