VA Aid & Attendance: The Most Underused Benefit in Arizona
The VA Aid & Attendance pension benefit is one of the most valuable and least-used resources available to Arizona veterans and surviving spouses. In 2026, a married veteran requiring daily assistance can receive up to $2,830/month tax-free — in addition to any other VA compensation or Social Security. A single veteran qualifies for up to $2,358/month; a surviving spouse can receive up to $1,515/month.
To qualify, the veteran (or their spouse) must: (1) have served at least 90 days of active duty with at least one day during a wartime period, (2) have a discharge that was anything other than dishonorable, (3) need regular assistance with activities of daily living (bathing, dressing, eating, medication management), (4) meet income and asset thresholds set by the VA.
The income threshold is based on net income after unreimbursed medical expenses. For most seniors in care, the monthly care cost itself reduces the countable income to near zero, which is why many who appear income-ineligible actually qualify.
Asset Limits and the 3-Year Look-Back
Since 2018, the VA has applied an asset limit and a 36-month (3-year) look-back for Aid & Attendance applications. The 2026 asset limit is approximately $159,000 (excluding the primary home, one vehicle, and personal property). Assets above this threshold may need to be reduced before a favorable determination.
Unlike ALTCS's 5-year look-back, the VA's look-back is 3 years. Gifts or uncompensated transfers of assets made within that window may generate a penalty period. Families planning for ALTCS and VA simultaneously need to sequence any asset planning carefully — an elder law attorney with dual ALTCS/VA expertise is the right professional for this.
Arizona State Veterans Homes
Arizona operates four State Veterans Homes providing skilled nursing care at significantly subsidized rates for qualifying veterans. The four facilities are in Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff, and Yuma. In Phoenix, the Arizona State Veterans Home is located near the VA Phoenix Health Care System campus.
Residents pay based on income: those who can contribute pay a portion of their income toward the daily rate, which is well below private-pay skilled nursing costs in the Phoenix metro. Medicaid-eligible veterans have their care costs covered through a combination of VA per-diem payments and AHCCCS (Arizona Medicaid). Demand significantly exceeds supply — waitlists are common. Apply early, even if placement is not imminent.
To apply: contact the Arizona Department of Veterans' Services (ADVS) at azdvs.gov or call (602) 255-3373. You will need a DD-214, medical records, and financial documentation.
VA Community Living Centers
The VA Phoenix Health Care System operates a Community Living Center (CLC) in Phoenix. VA CLCs provide skilled nursing care and short-term rehabilitation for veterans who meet VA clinical eligibility requirements. CLCs are particularly relevant for veterans who have recently been discharged from a hospital and need rehab before returning home or transitioning to a long-term setting.
VA CLCs are not available to all veterans — eligibility depends on service-connection status, income, and clinical need. Veterans with a service-connected disability rating typically have higher priority. Contact the VA Phoenix Health Care System social work team at (602) 277-5551 to start the eligibility determination.
ALTCS and VA Benefits: How They Interact
Veterans in Arizona can often qualify for both ALTCS and Aid & Attendance simultaneously, but the interaction requires careful navigation. ALTCS treats VA Aid & Attendance payments as countable income in most cases — meaning the Aid & Attendance benefit reduces the ALTCS patient contribution but does not disqualify the veteran.
Practically, a veteran receiving $2,358/month in Aid & Attendance who has $1,800/month in Social Security would have $4,158/month in gross income — well above the ALTCS income limit of $2,829/month. That situation requires a Miller Trust for ALTCS qualification, which channels income above the limit into a dedicated trust account. Coordinating the two programs correctly requires an elder law attorney or a VA-accredited benefits advisor. Getting it wrong can delay or disrupt both benefit streams.
How to Apply for Aid & Attendance
Applying for Aid & Attendance yourself is possible but slow — VA timelines without professional help average 9 to 18 months. Accredited VA claims agents and attorneys can significantly accelerate this. The process:
1. Gather your DD-214 (Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty), birth certificate, marriage certificate (if applying as surviving spouse), and 12 months of financial records. 2. Obtain physician documentation of care need — a letter from a treating physician stating the veteran requires regular assistance with ADLs is sufficient. 3. File VA Form 21-2680 (Examination for Housebound Status or Permanent Need for Regular Aid & Attendance) along with VA Form 21P-534EZ (Application for DIC, Death Pension, and/or Accrued Benefits). 4. Submit to the Phoenix VA Regional Office or via eBenefits online.
Arizona also has county veteran service officers (CVSOs) who provide free application assistance. Contact ADVS at azdvs.gov to find your county officer. Our advisors can also connect you with VA-accredited assistance — contact us through the website.