Title 38 › Part III— READJUSTMENT AND RELATED BENEFITS › Chapter 32— POST-VIETNAM ERA VETERANS’ EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE › Subchapter III— ENTITLEMENT; DURATION › § 3232
Educational benefits normally end 10 years after a veteran’s last discharge or release from active duty. A discharge or release that lasted less than 90 days does not count as the last one unless it was for a service-connected disability, a preexisting medical problem the VA says is not service-connected, hardship, or a job cut. If a veteran could not start or finish school because of a physical or mental disability (not caused by their own misconduct), the VA can extend that 10-year limit. The veteran must ask for the extension within one year after either the end of the 10-year period or the end of the disability, whichever comes later. If an extension is given, the VA restarts the clock when the veteran recovers and it is practical to begin or return to school. If a veteran has not used their benefits by the end of the time limit and does not file a claim within one year after that, they are automatically disenrolled. Any contributions left in the fund can be refunded after the veteran is told and asks for the refund. If no refund is requested within one year of the notice, the money is assumed unclaimed and moved to the VA to pay other earned entitlements. For tests: the VA will pay up to $2,000 or the test fee for certain licensing or certification tests, whichever is less. For national admission or course-credit tests, the VA pays the test fee. The amount charged against a veteran’s months of entitlement is the payment divided by the full-time monthly educational rate the veteran would otherwise get, and payments cannot exceed the veteran’s remaining entitlement.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 3232
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60