Title 38 › Part III— READJUSTMENT AND RELATED BENEFITS › Chapter 30— ALL-VOLUNTEER FORCE EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM › Subchapter II— BASIC EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE › § 3020
The Secretary of Defense may let service secretaries allow certain career service members to give unused GI Bill education months to their spouse, their child or children, or both. To be eligible, a member must have finished 6 years of service and agree to serve at least 4 more years, or qualify under rules made later. A member may transfer up to 36 months of unused benefit. The Secretary of Defense can set a minimum transfer of no less than 18 months. The member must name who gets the months, how many months each gets, and the time period for each transfer. Transfers must be done while the member is still in the military. The member can change or cancel a transfer anytime while serving by sending written notice to the service secretary and the Secretary of Veterans Affairs. Transferred benefits are not marital property. A spouse cannot start using transferred months until the member has completed 6 years of service. A child can start using them only after the member has completed 10 years of service and the child has finished high school (or an equivalent) or is 18. Each month the dependent uses counts as one month taken from the member’s entitlement. Dependents generally get the same monthly payment the member would receive, with some legal exceptions. The member’s death does not stop the dependent from using transferred months. A transferred child may ignore the usual 10-year rule but must stop using the benefit by age 26. If there is an overpayment, the dependent and the member are both responsible. If the member does not complete the agreed additional service, months already used by the dependent may be treated as overpayment unless the member dies or leaves for a specific reason listed in the law. Approvals for transfers in any fiscal year depend on available funding to cover the Department of Defense’s cost. Defined term: “Secretary concerned” means the Army Secretary for Army matters; the Navy Secretary for Navy and Marine Corps matters; the Air Force Secretary for Air Force and Space Force matters; and the Secretary of Defense (or the Homeland Security Secretary when the Coast Guard is not operating as part of the Navy) for Coast Guard matters.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 3020
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60