HR-1432-118
Became Public Law No: 118-146.
What it does
The VETT Act removes the requirement that at least 90% of a tax-exempt veterans' organization's members be wartime veterans in order for donations to that organization to qualify as tax-deductible charitable contributions. Starting with tax years after 2024, any federally chartered veterans' organization — which already qualifies for tax-exempt status under the existing 75% Armed Forces membership rule — may receive tax-deductible donations. The deduction is capped at 60% of the donor's adjusted gross income, the same limit that applies to donations to most public charities.
Who benefits
Federally chartered veterans' organizations whose membership includes fewer than 90% wartime veterans (e.g., organizations with significant numbers of peacetime veterans), who would now be eligible to receive tax-deductible donations. Donors to those organizations, who would gain a tax deduction they previously could not claim. Peacetime veterans and their families, who may be better served by organizations that can now attract more charitable funding. Smaller or newer veterans' groups that are federally chartered but have not historically met the 90% wartime-veteran threshold.
Who is hurt
The federal government would collect less tax revenue, as more charitable donations become deductible. Veterans' organizations that already met the 90% wartime-veteran threshold may face increased competition for donor dollars from organizations that previously could not receive tax-deductible contributions. Taxpayers who do not itemize deductions would receive no direct benefit from the change, as the charitable deduction only applies to those who itemize on their federal returns.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the existing 90% wartime-veteran membership requirement creates an arbitrary and inequitable distinction among veterans' organizations. Because the nature of U.S. military service has shifted — with fewer large-scale declared wars and more peacetime and operational deployments — many organizations serving veterans honorably cannot meet a threshold designed for an earlier era. Federally chartered status already represents a rigorous standard of congressional recognition, making it a more meaningful and consistent eligibility criterion than wartime membership percentages. Denying tax-deductible status to these groups disadvantages peacetime veterans and limits the charitable resources available to serve them. Equalizing the tax treatment of all federally chartered veterans' organizations encourages broader philanthropic support for the veteran community as a whole.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the 90% wartime-veteran threshold exists for a substantive reason: to ensure that the most favorable tax treatment is reserved for organizations primarily serving those who bore the greatest risk and sacrifice in direct combat or wartime service. Broadening eligibility to all federally chartered organizations — regardless of the composition of their membership — dilutes the special recognition historically accorded to wartime veterans. Critics may also contend that the change reduces federal tax revenue without a clear accounting of the fiscal cost, and that "federally chartered" status is a procedural designation that does not guarantee an organization's primary focus remains on veteran welfare. The 60% adjusted-gross-income cap, while consistent with public charity rules, does not fully offset the revenue impact of expanding deductibility to a wider set of organizations.