Title 38 › Part PART IV— - GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - SPECIAL PROVISIONS RELATING TO BENEFITS › § 5313
Stops or reduces VA disability and survivor payments for people who are convicted of a felony and jailed for more than 60 days. Payments stop being paid at full amount starting on the sixty-first day of that jail time and ending when the jail time ends. A veteran rated 20 percent or higher can get no more than the rate listed in section 1114(a). A veteran rated under 20 percent, or a surviving spouse, parent, or child, can get no more than one-half of that 1114(a) rate. The rule does not apply while the person is in a work-release program or living in a halfway house. Any money not paid to a veteran can be split and sent to others under the same rules as section 5307. If dependency and indemnity compensation is not paid to a surviving spouse, it can be given to surviving child(ren). If it is not paid to a surviving child, it can go to the surviving spouse or other surviving children. Nothing can be apportioned to someone else who is jailed for a felony. The VA must not give a total disability rating based on unemployability during any period the veteran is jailed for a felony. The rules apply to felonies committed after October 7, 1980, and to certain incarcerations on or after October 1, 1980. "Compensation" and "dependency and indemnity compensation" mean the disability and death benefits listed in the named VA sections.
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Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 5313
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73