S-4108-119
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held.
Sponsored by James Risch (R-ID)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law (38 U.S.C. § 2307) to raise the VA burial and funeral expense reimbursement for veterans who die from a service-connected disability from $2,000 to $3,000. It would also add an automatic annual cost-of-living adjustment tied to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), so the benefit would increase each year in line with inflation going forward.
Who benefits
Families and survivors of veterans who die from a service-connected disability, who would receive a higher reimbursement for burial and funeral costs. Funeral homes and burial service providers who serve veterans' families may see more of their costs covered. Veterans service organizations that advocate for survivor benefits would see a policy goal advanced.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers would bear the cost of the increased benefit and ongoing inflation adjustments. The Department of Veterans Affairs would face modestly higher administrative obligations to calculate and apply annual CPI adjustments. Families of veterans who die from non-service-connected causes are not covered by this provision and would not benefit, potentially highlighting an inequity in the tiered benefit structure.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the $2,000 burial benefit has not kept pace with the actual cost of funerals, which the National Funeral Directors Association estimates averaged over $7,800 in recent years, leaving families of service-connected veterans to cover a large gap out of pocket. They contend that veterans who died as a direct result of their military service deserve a benefit that reflects real-world costs, and that the CPI indexing provision prevents the benefit from eroding again through future inaction.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill raises the benefit to only $3,000 — still far below average funeral costs — making it an incremental measure that does not meaningfully close the gap it purports to address. They contend that without a full review of the entire VA burial benefit structure, piecemeal increases create an uneven system where the level of benefit depends heavily on how a veteran's death is classified, and that the CPI mechanism adds a permanent, open-ended spending obligation without a defined ceiling or congressional reauthorization requirement.