HR-9356-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Sponsored by Michael Lawler (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would create a new federal tax credit for private cemeteries that pay to attach veteran headstone medallions — official markers issued under federal law (38 U.S.C. § 2306) — to the headstones or grave markers of deceased veterans buried in their grounds. The credit would equal the full amount of qualifying expenses incurred. To claim it, a cemetery operator would need to certify to the IRS that the medallion was attached and submit an itemized expense statement. The credit would also be eligible for elective direct payment, meaning qualifying entities that owe little or no tax could receive it as a cash payment from the Treasury.
Who benefits
Private cemetery operators, who would have their out-of-pocket costs for medallion attachment offset dollar-for-dollar by the tax credit. Families of veterans buried in private cemeteries, who may see more consistent or faster medallion placement at no cost to themselves. Veterans' service organizations that advocate for grave recognition. Veterans buried in private cemeteries who currently lack medallions, as the credit may incentivize cemetery operators to proactively complete installations. Smaller, rural, or nonprofit-affiliated private cemeteries that may have previously declined to absorb medallion attachment costs.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers broadly, who would bear the cost of the credit through reduced tax revenue. Veterans buried in government-operated national cemeteries, who are not covered by this bill and receive no comparable new benefit. Private cemeteries that have already absorbed medallion attachment costs without any credit, receiving no retroactive benefit (the credit applies only to expenses incurred after enactment). Tax preparation and compliance professionals may see minor administrative burden increases for cemetery clients navigating the new certification requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veteran headstone medallions are a meaningful, congressionally authorized form of recognition for those who served, and that private cemeteries — unlike national cemeteries — currently bear attachment costs with no federal assistance, creating an uneven system where a veteran's recognition depends on where they happen to be buried. They contend the credit removes a financial barrier that has left an unknown number of veterans' graves without medallions, and that the elective direct payment provision ensures even tax-exempt or low-revenue cemetery operators can participate, maximizing the program's reach.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the federal government already funds veteran grave recognition through the Department of Veterans Affairs and that adding a tax credit layered on top of existing programs creates administrative complexity without a demonstrated gap in service. They contend that because the credit equals 100% of expenses with no cap, it could be subject to abuse or inflated cost claims, and that the IRS — rather than the VA — is an inefficient vehicle for overseeing veteran burial recognition, potentially diverting limited agency resources from higher-priority tax enforcement activities.