VA Benefits Could Rise for Millions Under Senate Bill S. 4487


How a bipartisan proposal may reshape disability and survivor compensation starting in 2026

A new bipartisan bill in the U.S. Senate—S. 4487—could significantly increase monthly VA disability and survivor benefits for millions of Veterans and their families. Introduced by Senator Jerry Moran with broad bipartisan support, the bill aims to raise the base payment rates for both VA disability compensation and Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC), with changes taking effect as early as late 2026.

At a time when inflation and rising living costs continue to strain Veteran households, this legislation represents one of the most consequential proposed adjustments to VA compensation in years. Unlike annual cost‑of‑living adjustments (COLA), which fluctuate with inflation, S. 4487 would permanently raise the baseline of VA payments across all disability ratings.

Senate voting results showing VA Disability Benefits Increase 2026 passed with 92 yeas and 6 nays, and a copy of the Veterans Disability Compensation Increase Act of 2026 on a desk
The Senate passes the Veterans Disability Compensation Increase Act of 2026 with overwhelming support.

What Senate Bill S. 4487 Actually Does

According to the bill text and congressional summaries, S. 4487 would:

  • Increase VA disability compensation rates for all Veterans with service‑connected disabilities
  • Increase DIC payments for surviving spouses and dependents
  • Apply increases automatically—no new application required
  • Raise payment levels across all disability ratings, from 0% to 100%
  • Affect more than 5 million Veterans and survivors currently receiving compensation

This is not a new benefit category. It is a structural increase to the existing compensation tables.


What the Bill Does Not Do

S. 4487 does not:

  • Change how disability ratings are assigned
  • Create new eligibility categories
  • Replace annual COLA increases
  • Alter the VA’s service‑connection criteria
  • Change the claims or appeals process

In short: your rating stays the same, but your monthly payment would go up.


Who Would Be Affected

If passed, the bill would impact:

  • All Veterans currently receiving VA disability compensation
  • Surviving spouses receiving DIC
  • Dependent children eligible under DIC
  • Veterans with ratings from 0% to 100%
  • Veterans receiving additional compensation for dependents

The VA reports nearly 6 million Veterans currently receive disability compensation, meaning the bill’s reach would be massive.


Why This Matters for Veterans

1. Permanent Increase, Not Temporary Relief

COLA increases fluctuate with inflation. S. 4487 raises the baseline—meaning every future COLA increase would start from a higher number.

2. Helps Veterans Struggling With Rising Costs

Housing, food, utilities, and medical expenses have all risen sharply since 2020. Many Veterans—especially those on fixed incomes—have felt the squeeze.

3. Supports Survivors and Families

DIC payments would also rise, providing long‑overdue financial relief to surviving spouses and dependents.

4. Could Improve Recruitment and Retention

Experts note that stronger long‑term benefits may help rebuild trust and encourage future service.


How Much Will Payments Increase?

The bill does not specify exact dollar amounts yet. That will come after:

  1. A Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing
  2. A Congressional Budget Office (CBO) cost estimate
  3. Negotiations on final payment tables

However, because the increase applies across all ratings, every Veteran receiving compensation would see a higher monthly payment.


Where the Bill Stands Now

  • Introduced: Filed in the Senate
  • Current Status: Awaiting Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing
  • Next Step: CBO cost estimate
  • Outlook: Bipartisan support gives it momentum, but Congress is juggling multiple Veteran‑related bills this session.

What This Means for You

If you are a Veteran receiving disability compensation—or a surviving spouse receiving DIC—you would not need to reapply or submit new evidence.

If S. 4487 becomes law:

  • Your monthly payment would increase automatically
  • Your rating stays the same
  • Your eligibility does not change
  • Your future COLA increases would be based on a higher baseline

For many Veterans, especially those rated 70%–100% or those supporting dependents, this could mean hundreds of additional dollars per month once implemented.


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I’m Jaime

Welcome to my cozy corner of the internet dedicated to military veterans who have served their country or community. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of the Aftermath; one that honors the realities of military life, the scars of war, and the warrior’s long road back to harmony.

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