If you’re a wartime veteran—or the surviving spouse of one—you may be sitting on benefits you don’t even know exist.
VA Aid & Attendance can provide over $2,400 per month to help pay for long-term care. Yet most eligible veterans never apply. They don’t know the benefit exists, assume they don’t qualify, or get lost in the application process.
For St. Clair County families facing the high cost of elder care, these overlooked benefits can be life-changing. A veteran needing assisted living or in-home care could receive tens of thousands of dollars annually—tax-free—to help cover those costs.
Here’s what Port Huron area veterans and their families need to know about VA pension benefits, eligibility requirements, and how these benefits fit into comprehensive elder law planning.
Understanding VA Pension Benefits for Elders
Basic Veterans Pension
The VA pension is a needs-based, tax-free monthly payment for wartime veterans with limited income and assets who are either 65 or older or permanently disabled (from non-service-connected conditions).
This is not the same as VA disability compensation. Disability compensation requires a service-connected injury or illness. The pension program helps veterans who served during wartime but whose current health or financial needs aren’t related to their military service.
Surviving spouses of wartime veterans may also qualify for Survivors Pension under similar rules.
Aid & Attendance: The Key Benefit for Long-Term Care
Aid & Attendance (A&A) is an additional monthly amount added to the basic VA pension for veterans or survivors who need help with daily activities.
You may qualify for A&A if you:
- Need help with activities of daily living (bathing, dressing, eating, toileting)
- Are bedridden
- Are in a nursing home due to disability
- Have severely limited eyesight
2026 Maximum Monthly Benefit Amounts
| Claimant Type | Maximum Monthly A&A |
| Single veteran (no dependents) | ~$2,424 |
| Married veteran | ~$2,874 |
| Surviving spouse | ~$1,558 |
“For a St. Clair County veteran paying $4,500 monthly for assisted living, Aid & Attendance could cover more than half that cost. Over a year, that’s nearly $35,000 in tax-free benefits most families never claim.”
These amounts are adjusted annually for cost of living. The figures above reflect 2026 projections—always verify current rates with the VA or an accredited representative.
Housebound Benefits
Veterans who don’t meet full A&A criteria but are substantially confined to their home due to permanent disability may qualify for Housebound benefits—a smaller additional monthly amount between basic pension and full A&A.
Who Qualifies for VA Pension and Aid & Attendance
Wartime Service Requirements
To qualify for VA pension, the veteran must have served during a designated wartime period. Current qualifying periods include:
- World War II (December 7, 1941 – December 31, 1946)
- Korean War (June 27, 1950 – January 31, 1955)
- Vietnam War (August 5, 1964 – May 7, 1975; earlier for those serving in-country)
- Gulf War (August 2, 1990 – present)
Critical point: Combat service is not required. The veteran needs only one day of active duty during a wartime period. A veteran who served stateside during Vietnam qualifies just as much as one who saw combat.
Service Duration Requirements
- Veterans who entered service before September 8, 1980: At least 90 days of active duty, with at least one day during wartime
- Veterans who entered service after September 7, 1980: Generally 24 months of active service or full period called to duty, with at least one day during wartime
All veterans must have received an other-than-dishonorable discharge.
Age and Disability Requirements
The veteran must meet at least one of these criteria:
- Age 65 or older
- Permanently and totally disabled (non-service-connected)
- In a nursing home for long-term care due to disability
- Receiving Social Security Disability (SSDI) or SSI
Financial Eligibility
VA pension is needs-based. For 2026, the combined net worth limit is approximately $163,699. This includes both countable assets and annual income.
Here’s where planning matters: Unreimbursed medical expenses reduce countable income. If a veteran pays $50,000 annually for assisted living, that expense dramatically lowers their countable income for VA purposes—potentially qualifying them for benefits they wouldn’t otherwise receive.
Coordinating VA Benefits with Medicaid Planning
Why Coordination Matters
Many St. Clair County elders eventually need both VA benefits and Medicaid. Understanding how these programs interact is essential for maximizing total benefits.
Problem: A Port Huron veteran qualifies for Aid & Attendance but will eventually need nursing home Medicaid. His family worries that accepting VA benefits now will hurt Medicaid eligibility later.
Why it matters: VA and Medicaid have different rules. Missteps can cost families thousands in lost benefits or create eligibility problems.
Context: VA pension uses a net worth test (assets plus income, minus medical expenses) with a 3-year lookback for certain transfers. Michigan Medicaid has stricter asset limits and a 5-year lookback for transfers with harsher penalties.
Solution: Coordinated planning that considers both programs simultaneously—structuring income, assets, and care payments to maximize VA benefits now while preserving Medicaid eligibility later.
Next step: Work with an elder law attorney who understands both VA and Medicaid rules before making major financial decisions.
Key Differences Between Programs
| Factor | VA Pension/A&A | Michigan Medicaid |
| Asset limit | ~$163,699 (2026) | ~$9,950 single (2026) |
| Lookback period | 3 years (limited) | 5 years |
| Transfer penalties | Less severe | Significant |
| Income treatment | Reduced by medical expenses | Strict limits |
“Many families apply for VA benefits without considering Medicaid implications—or avoid VA benefits fearing Medicaid problems. Neither approach is right. Coordinated planning maximizes both.”
Can You Receive Both?
Yes, it’s possible to receive VA Aid & Attendance and Michigan Medicaid simultaneously. However:
- A&A may be reduced (not eliminated) when Medicaid pays for nursing home care
- The interaction depends on specific circumstances
- Improper structuring can reduce total benefits
This complexity is exactly why elder law attorneys coordinate with VA-accredited representatives rather than handling benefits in isolation.
St. Clair County VA Resources
St. Clair County Department of Veterans Affairs
St. Clair County veterans have access to excellent local support:
Address: 200 Grand River Avenue, Suite 104, Port Huron, MI 48060 Phone: (810) 989-6945 Fax: (810) 966-4682
The St. Clair County Department of Veterans Affairs (SCCVA) has served local veterans for over 75 years. Their accredited County Veterans Service Officers (CVSOs) provide free assistance with:
- Gathering military records and documentation
- Completing VA pension and A&A applications
- Submitting and tracking claims
- Navigating appeals if claims are denied
Why Use Accredited Representatives
VA benefits applications are notoriously complex. Incomplete applications get denied. Missing documentation causes delays. Working with SCCVA’s accredited staff significantly improves approval odds and speeds processing.
The Attorney’s Role
Elder law attorneys don’t replace county VA offices—they complement them. While CVSOs handle VA claims directly, attorneys coordinate the broader legal strategy:
- Medicaid eligibility planning
- Asset protection and trust planning
- Powers of attorney and healthcare directives
- Estate planning that accounts for VA benefit rules
The best outcomes happen when attorneys and accredited VA representatives collaborate, each handling their area of expertise.
What Documents You’ll Need
For VA Pension Applications
Gathering documentation before applying prevents delays:
- DD-214 or discharge papers (proving service dates and character of discharge)
- Marriage certificate (if claiming as married veteran or surviving spouse)
- Death certificate (for surviving spouse claims)
- Birth certificates for dependents
- Financial statements showing income, assets, and expenses
- Medical records documenting care needs
- Care provider invoices showing what you pay for assisted living, home care, or nursing home
- Physician statement describing need for assistance with daily activities
SCCVA staff help veterans gather and organize these documents. Don’t let missing paperwork stop you from starting the process—the county VA office knows how to obtain records you can’t find yourself.
Frequently Asked Questions About VA Benefits for St. Clair County Elders
What counts as wartime service for VA pension?
The VA defines specific wartime periods: WWII, Korea, Vietnam, and Gulf War (ongoing). You need at least one day of active duty during a wartime period, plus minimum total service requirements and an other-than-dishonorable discharge. Combat service is not required—many veterans qualify based on stateside or support roles.
Do I need service-connected disabilities to get Aid & Attendance?
No. VA pension and Aid & Attendance are non-service-connected benefits. Your current health needs don’t have to relate to your military service at all. Separate VA disability compensation exists for service-connected conditions and has different rules and amounts.
How long does it take to get Aid & Attendance approved?
Processing times vary widely—from a few months to over a year. Complete applications with strong documentation process faster. Working with SCCVA’s accredited representatives helps ensure your application is complete before submission, reducing delays from requests for additional information.
Can I qualify for both VA Aid & Attendance and Michigan Medicaid?
Yes, receiving both is possible, but the programs interact in complex ways. A&A may be reduced when Medicaid pays for nursing home care. Coordinating applications and timing with both an elder law attorney and accredited VA representative helps maximize total benefits.
What if my net worth exceeds the VA limit?
High unreimbursed medical expenses can reduce your countable income significantly, potentially bringing you under the net worth threshold. Strategic planning—restructuring how care is paid for, using compliant trusts, or coordinating spousal assets—may help. However, the VA has a 3-year lookback for certain transfers, so planning should happen well before applying.
Get the Benefits You Earned
You served your country. Now let your country help you.
VA Aid & Attendance and pension benefits exist specifically for veterans like you—but they don’t arrive automatically. Someone has to apply, document eligibility, and navigate the system.
At Boroja, Bernier & Associates, we help St. Clair County and Southeast Michigan veterans integrate VA benefits into comprehensive elder law plans. Our attorneys coordinate with accredited VA representatives and understand how to maximize both VA and Medicaid benefits for veterans facing long-term care needs.
With our main office in Shelby Township and satellite offices in Troy, Ann Arbor, and Lansing, we serve veterans and families throughout Macomb County, Oakland County, Wayne County, St. Clair County, and Southeast Michigan.
To schedule a consultation with the Michigan elder law attorneys at Boroja, Bernier & Associates, call our law offices at (586) 991-7611. Your service earned these benefits—let us help you claim them.



