Added amounts for surviving spouses Effective December 1, Surviving spouse rates if the Veteran died before January 1, If you're the spouse or child of a Veteran who died before January 1, , we use a different method to determine your DIC monthly payment. Monthly payment rates Effective December 1, At least one of these must be true.
You're: Under age 18, or Between ages 18 and 23 and in a VA-approved school program, or Permanently unable to support yourself due to a disability that happened before age 18 we use the term "helpless child" Monthly payment rates Effective December 1, This will be your total monthly payment.
Full section 38 U. Last updated: March 2, Back to top. If this description is true…. The Veteran had a VA disability rating of totally disabling including for individual unemployability for at least the 8 full years leading up to their death, and You were married to the Veteran for those same 8 years. You may qualify for this benefit. Added monthly amount in U. You have a disability and need help with regular daily activities like eating, bathing, or dressing.
Aid and Attendance. Housebound allowance. You have 1 or more children who are under age Yes, eventually, although not all survivors will see an increase in the first year. Eventually, though, you will see an increase as the SBP-DIC offset is further reduced in and then completely eliminated in Now that the offset is being eliminated, will there be any back pay for the years we didn't get Survivor Benefit Plan SBP payments we paid for?
Most likely not. The change only impacts those surviving spouses who were previously subject to the SBP-DIC offset, and those surviving spouses and children of members who died in the line of duty if the spouse chose to transfer the SBP benefit to a child or children. Will I now receive SBP also? No, declining SBP at retirement is an irrevocable decision.
Section of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year does not grant the authority to reinstate SBP coverage if it was previously declined at retirement. If a surviving spouse remarries prior to age 55, he or she is ineligible to continue receiving SBP. This is prevented by federal law.
In the absence of a law authorizing survivors to get both benefits at once, Congress has authorized the Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance SSIA to partially reduce the offset. This accounting shuffle allows survivors of disabled veterans to effectively bypass the federal mandate against double-dipping, and is safe from later court challenges. Military benefits are always changing.
Keep up with everything from pay to health care by subscribing to Military. Military families and retirees will be paying more for Tricare in , but thankfully the price increase is relatively small
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