VA Health Care for Disabled Veterans
Overview
VA health care is one of the most valuable benefits available to veterans with service-connected disabilities. Depending on your disability rating, you may qualify for free or low-cost medical care covering everything from primary care and mental health to surgery and prescriptions.
Your disability rating directly affects your priority group — which determines what you pay (if anything) and how quickly you can access care.
Eligibility
You may be eligible for VA health care if you:
- Served in the active military, naval, or air service
- Were discharged or released under conditions other than dishonorable
- Meet minimum service requirements (generally 24 continuous months or the full period called to active duty)
Many veterans with service-connected disabilities qualify for enrollment priority, but the exact priority group depends on the rating level and other eligibility factors.
Priority groups and disability ratings
The VA assigns enrolled veterans to one of eight priority groups. Your disability rating is the primary factor:
Priority Group 1
- Veterans with 50% or higher service-connected disability rating
- Veterans determined by the VA to be unemployable due to service-connected conditions
Benefits: Lowest copay burden. VA states Priority Group 1 veterans do not pay medication copays, and many other copays are waived.
Priority Group 2
- Veterans with 30-40% service-connected disability rating
Benefits: Broad access to care, but copays can still apply for some medications and non-service-connected services.
Priority Group 3
- Veterans with 10-20% service-connected disability rating
- Former POWs
- Purple Heart recipients
- Veterans discharged for a disability incurred or aggravated in the line of duty
Benefits: Free care for service-connected conditions, copays may apply for non-service-connected care.
Priority Group 4
- Veterans receiving Aid and Attendance or Housebound benefits
Priority Groups 5 and 6
- Veterans receiving VA pension or qualifying for Medicaid
- Some veterans with 0% service-connected ratings
- Other veterans qualifying through special eligibility categories
Priority Groups 6-8
- Various categories based on income, special circumstances, and service history.
What VA health care covers
VA health care is comprehensive and includes:
- Primary care — Routine checkups, preventive care, health screenings
- Mental health — Individual and group therapy, PTSD treatment, substance use programs, crisis intervention
- Specialty care — Cardiology, orthopedics, neurology, dermatology, and more
- Urgent and emergency care — VA emergency rooms and urgent care at approved community facilities
- Prescriptions — Medications through VA pharmacies (Priority Group 1 has no medication copays; other groups may owe copays depending on the medication and condition)
- Surgery — Inpatient and outpatient surgical procedures
- Rehabilitation — Physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy
- Vision care — Eye exams and some corrective lenses
- Hearing care — Hearing exams, hearing aids (free for service-connected hearing loss)
- Dental care — Limited (see our dental benefits guide)
- Home health care — For veterans who need skilled care at home
- Geriatric care — Adult day health care, respite care, hospice
How to enroll
Online (fastest)
- Go to VA.gov/health-care/apply
- Sign in or create a VA.gov account
- Complete VA Form 10-10EZ
- Submit — most applications are processed within 1-2 weeks
By phone
Call 1-877-222-8387 (Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 8 p.m. ET)
In person
Visit the enrollment office at any VA medical center. Find your nearest facility at VA.gov/find-locations.
By mail
Download and complete VA Form 10-10EZ and mail it to: Health Eligibility Center 2957 Clairmont Rd., Suite 200 Atlanta, GA 30329-1647
VA Community Care (MISSION Act)
If the VA can’t provide the care you need in a timely manner, you may be eligible for care at approved community providers through the MISSION Act. You may qualify if:
- The VA doesn’t offer the service you need
- The VA can’t provide care within designated access standards (drive time or wait time)
- You and your VA provider agree community care is in your best interest
Your VA primary care team initiates community care referrals. You cannot self-refer to community providers under this program.
Tips for getting the most from VA health care
- Enroll as soon as possible — Even if you don’t need care now, enrollment establishes your eligibility and priority group
- Establish primary care — Having a VA primary care provider on record makes it easier to get referrals and specialty care
- Use My HealtheVet — The VA’s online patient portal lets you message your care team, refill prescriptions, and view test results
- Document everything — If you’re planning to file for a rating increase, your VA treatment records serve as evidence
- Know your copay obligations — Copays vary by priority group and type of care. Check your current VA eligibility and copay status directly.
How VA health care connects to your disability rating
Your disability rating and VA health care work together:
- Treatment records from VA care can be used as evidence for disability claims and rating increases
- Higher ratings can improve your priority group — moving from 40% to 50% can reduce copays and improve eligibility for some benefits
- Service-connected conditions always receive free treatment regardless of your priority group
- C&P exams are separate from regular VA health care appointments — don’t confuse the two
Use our VA disability calculator to see how your combined rating affects both your monthly payment and health care eligibility.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice. For personalized guidance, consult a VA-accredited VSO, attorney, or claims agent.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do all veterans qualify for VA health care?
Not automatically. Eligibility depends on factors including length of service, discharge status, disability rating, income, and special eligibility categories. Many veterans with service-connected disabilities qualify for enrollment priority, but the exact priority group depends on the rating and other factors.
Is VA health care free for disabled veterans?
It depends on your priority group and the type of care. Veterans rated 50% or higher, or paid at the 100% rate because of unemployability, generally have the fewest copays. Veterans with lower ratings may still have copays for some non-service-connected care or medications.
Can I use VA health care and private insurance at the same time?
Yes. Having private insurance does not disqualify you from VA health care. The VA may bill your private insurance for treatment of non-service-connected conditions, but you will never receive a bill for any amount your insurance doesn't cover.
How long does it take to enroll in VA health care?
Most applications are processed within 1-2 weeks. You can apply online at VA.gov, by phone at 1-877-222-8387, in person at any VA medical center, or by mailing VA Form 10-10EZ.
Sources
Every rating percentage, diagnostic code, and dollar figure on this page is sourced from the references below. See our editorial policy for how we choose and verify sources.
- VA Disability Compensation — U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
- VA Health Care — U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
- VA Benefits and Health Care — U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice. For personalized guidance, consult a VA-accredited VSO, attorney, or claims agent.