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can i transfer my va education benefits

by Neoma Cassin Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
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Q: Can I transfer my VA education benefits to a dependent? A: With both the Montgomery GI Bill

G.I. Bill

The Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, commonly known as the G.I. Bill, was a law that provided a range of benefits for returning World War II veterans. It was passed by the 78th United States Congress and signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on June 22, 1944. The origi…

and the Veterans Educational Assistance Program, a veteran may not transfer any benefits to a dependent or spouse. However, education benefits may be transferred with the Post-9/11 GI Bill under certain criteria.

WHAT IS TRANSFERABILITY? The Post-9/11 GI Bill
Post-9/11 GI Bill
The Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008 improves educational benefits for certain individuals serving on active duty in the Armed Forces on or after September 11, 2001.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Post-9 › 11_Veterans_Educat...
allows Service members to transfer unused education benefits to immediate family members
. This applies to officer or enlisted, active duty and Selected Reserve. Qualifying immediate family members are spouses and children.
Aug 17, 2017

Full Answer

How do I Check my va education benefits?

Your Post-9/11 GI Bill Statement of Benefits might not be available if one of these is true:

  • The name on the account you’re signed in with doesn’t exactly match the name we have in our Post-9/11 GI Bill records.
  • We’re still processing your education benefits application, so we haven’t created a record yet for you. ...
  • You haven’t applied yet for Post-9/11 GI Bill education benefits. ...
  • You’re not eligible for Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits.

More items...

How to check VA education benefits?

Check rate tables for the Post-9/11 GI Bill and other Veterans education benefits programs. Find a Yellow Ribbon school Search for schools participating in the Yellow Ribbon Program, which can help pay for higher out-of-state, private school, or graduate school tuition that the Post-9/11 GI Bill doesn’t cover.

How long does it take VA to pay tuition?

VA uses a 30-day month regardless of how many days are in the month. Divide the monthly rate by 30 to get the daily rate. If a student is certified from the 1st through the 15th, the student is certified 15 days and is entitled to 1/2 of the full monthly benefit.

How to check your VA benefits?

You can also view these details:

  • Any evidence you’ve filed online to support your initial claim
  • Any additional evidence we’ve requested from you
  • Your claim type
  • What you’ve claimed
  • Your representative for VA claims

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Can I transfer my GI Bill to another school?

How do I transfer the benefit? While you're still on active duty, you'll request to transfer, change, or revoke a Transfer of Entitlement (TOE) through milConnect. You can't apply for a TOE through us. If the DoD approves the TOE, your family members may apply for benefits.

How do I transfer GI Bill benefits?

Have your family members apply to use their transferred benefits by submitting VA Form 22-1990E to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). They can complete the form online, or to complete it on paper, download the PDF. Or they can call the VA for education benefits information at 1-888-GIBILL1.

Can I still transfer GI Bill?

Unfortunately for every person who has asked if they can transfer the post-9/11 GI Bill after getting out of the military, the answer is "no." For now, the transferability option is available only while the service member is still on active duty, and it comes with additional service obligations for most applicants.

How long do VA education benefits last?

How many months of assistance can I receive and how long am I eligible? Generally, you may receive up to 36 months of entitlement under the Post-9/11 GI Bill. You will be eligible for benefits for 15 years from your last period of active duty of at least 90 consecutive days.

How many times can I transfer my GI Bill?

How Much of the GI Bill Benefits Can I Transfer? The military member can transfer up to 36 months of GI Bill benefits and can allocate them among eligible recipients at any time (but only once per month). The service member may also cancel a family member's use of the benefits at any time.

Can I give my wife my GI Bill?

Now that servicemembers can transfer the GI Bill to a spouse, all or part of any unused education benefits can be gifted as long as the request is completed while serving as an active member of the armed forces.

How long do you have to serve to transfer your GI Bill?

Previously, DoD required troops to have served at least 6 years in order to request a GI Bill transfer. That requirement remains, and the Pentagon's new policy will also require that service members not have served more than 16 years. So you'll need between six and 16 years in uniform.

Can I still use my GI Bill after 20 years?

There's no longer an expiration date. Previously, veterans had to use their Post-9/11 GI Bill within 15 years of their last 90-day period of active-duty service. That requirement is going away. This portion of the law will apply to anyone who left the military after January 1, 2013.

What is forever GI Bill benefits?

The Forever GI bill provides 30 million dollars in funding to upgrade technology at the Veterans Benefits Administration. This funding will let them complete their rules-based processing system for claims, and the department will provide training requirements to school certifying officers that process the paperwork.

What is the VA 10 year rule?

The VA disability 10-year rule states that the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) cannot eliminate a disability rating that has been in place for at least 10 years unless there is evidence of fraud. This 10-year period is calculated from the effective date of VA's original grant for service connection.

Can you get the GI Bill twice?

Answer: Yes, like the MGIB you are generally entitled to 36 months of educational assistance. If you are entitled to more than one GI Bill program you may be eligible for a maximum of 48 months of entitlement when using benefits under two or more GI Bill programs.

Can I transfer my GI Bill to my child after I retire?

A: As an eligible Service member, you can transfer Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits to your spouse, your children, or any combination of eligible family members.

Can I transfer my Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits?

You may be able to transfer your Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits if you’re on active duty or in the Selected Reserve and you meet all of these requireme...

Who’s covered?

Qualified dependents

What benefits can my qualified dependents get?

If the DoD approves the Transfer of Entitlement (TOE), your spouse or dependent children can apply for up to 36 months of benefits, and may be able...

When can they use the transferred benefits?

These conditions apply to family members using transferred benefits: Spouses May use the benefit right away May use the benefit while you’re on act...

How do I transfer the benefit?

While you’re still on active duty, you’ll request to transfer, change, or revoke a Transfer of Entitlement (TOE) through milConnect. You can’t appl...

Get more information

Go to the milConnect website To find out if you qualify, the status of your transfer request, and how to use the Transfer of Education Benefits (TE...

Type of Assistance

  • Eligible Servicemembers may transfer all 36 months or the portion of unused Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits (unless DoD or the Department of Homeland Security has limited the number of transferable months). If you're eligible, you may transfer benefits to the following individuals: 1. Your spouse 2. One or more of your children 3. Any combination of spo...
See more on benefits.va.gov

Available Benefits and Eligibility

  • Family members must be enrolled in the Defense Eligibility Enrollment Reporting System (DEERS) and be eligible for benefits at the time of transfer to receive transferred benefits. The option to transfer is open to any member of the armed forces active duty or Selected Reserve, officer or enlisted who is eligible for the Post-9/11 GI Bill, and meets the criteria established by the Depart…
See more on benefits.va.gov

Other Factors to Consider

  • Marriage and Divorce 1. A child's subsequent marriage will not affect his or her eligibility to receive the educational benefit; however, after an individual has designated a child as a transferee under this section, the individual retains the right to revoke or modify the transfer at any time. 2. A subsequent divorce will not affect the transferees eligibility to receive educational benefits; how…
See more on benefits.va.gov

More Information

  1. View the official DoD website for information on transferability(non-VA link)
  2. Get the fact sheet on transferability of Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits
  3. For specific questions about your eligibility, the status of your transfer request, and service specific questions about the TEB Portlet, please contact the appropriate career counselor or personne...
See more on benefits.va.gov

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