HR-2055-119
Subcommittee Hearings Held
Sponsored by Jahana Hayes (D-CT)
What it does
This bill would increase the monthly rate of Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) paid by the VA to surviving spouses of eligible veterans. It would also reduce the required period a veteran must have been rated totally disabled due to a service-connected condition — from 10 years to 5 years — for a survivor to qualify for benefits. Additionally, it would specify the payment amounts for survivors of veterans who were rated totally disabled for less than 10 years before their death.
Who benefits
Surviving spouses of veterans who died from service-connected conditions or were totally disabled by service-connected disabilities. Surviving spouses of veterans who were rated totally disabled for 5–9 years — a group currently ineligible — would gain access to benefits for the first time. Surviving children and parents of qualifying veterans may also benefit indirectly. Veterans service organizations that advocate for survivor benefits. VA benefits attorneys and claims processors who assist survivors navigating the system.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who fund VA benefit programs would bear the increased cost. The VA may face increased administrative burden processing a larger pool of eligible claimants. Competing federal spending priorities — including other VA programs — could face indirect pressure if the bill increases overall VA expenditures without a corresponding funding offset.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that surviving spouses of totally disabled veterans face significant financial hardship, often having left the workforce to serve as caregivers, and that the current 10-year threshold arbitrarily denies benefits to families of veterans who were severely disabled for years before death. They contend that reducing the threshold to 5 years better reflects the real sacrifices made by survivors and aligns DIC eligibility with the actual burden of caregiving, which can be substantial well before the 10-year mark is reached.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding eligibility and increasing benefit rates without a clear funding mechanism adds to federal expenditures at a time of significant fiscal pressure, and that the 10-year threshold was originally set to prevent abuse of the totally-disabled rating pathway as a route to survivor benefits. They contend that the bill does not address the broader structural challenges facing VA benefit programs, and that resources might be better directed toward veterans currently living with service-connected disabilities rather than expanding survivor payments.