A VA benefit (Chapter 35) providing monthly education payments to eligible dependents of permanently disabled veterans.
Dependents Educational Assistance (DEA), often referred to as Chapter 35, is a VA program that offers education and training opportunities to the spouses and children of veterans who are permanently and totally disabled due to a service-connected condition (or who died while on active duty or as a result of a service-connected condition).
DEA provides a monthly stipend paid directly to the student to help cover the cost of schooling. It does not pay tuition directly to the school like the GI Bill; instead, the student receives the cash payment to use for tuition, books, or housing.
The benefit is available to the dependents of a veteran with a 100% Permanent and Total (P&T) disability rating.
DEA is not limited to four-year universities. It can be used for:
Potentially. If a veteran is granted a 100% P&T rating retroactively, and a dependent was in school during that retroactive period, the student may be able to file for reimbursement for the months they were in school after the effective date of the rating.
Our office is committed to making veterans aware of their VA benefits and helping qualified veterans receive benefits that the VA has denied. In appeals, we always seek to secure the compensation our injured veterans rightfully deserve to provide for themselves and their families.
