2025-2026 VA Education Benefit Rates
The GI Bill Calculator is an essential planning tool for United States military veterans, service members, and their families who want to understand and maximize their education benefits. The GI Bill represents one of the most significant benefits earned through military service, covering tuition, housing, books, and other educational expenses. With multiple GI Bill programs available — each with different eligibility requirements, payment structures, and benefit levels — comparing options and estimating your actual benefit amounts can be challenging without the right tools. The Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) is the most comprehensive education benefit available to veterans who served on active duty after September 10, 2001. Benefits are tiered based on the length of active duty service, ranging from 50% for 90 days of service up to 100% for 36 or more months. At the 100% tier, the Post-9/11 GI Bill covers full in-state tuition and fees at public institutions, up to $29,920.95 per year at private and foreign institutions, a Monthly Housing Allowance (MHA) based on the E-5 with dependents Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) rate at your school's location, and up to $1,000 per year for books and supplies. Online-only students receive a flat national MHA rate of $1,169 per month for the 2025-2026 academic year. Students attending foreign institutions receive the national average MHA of $2,338 per month. The Monthly Housing Allowance is often the most valuable component of the Post-9/11 GI Bill, especially for veterans attending schools in high cost-of-living areas. In cities like San Francisco, New York, or Boston, the E-5 BAH rate can exceed $3,000 per month, resulting in an annual housing benefit of over $36,000. However, the MHA requires enrollment at more than 50% of a full-time course load — veterans taking fewer than half-time credits do not receive any housing allowance. Students taking at least one in-person class qualify for the full location-based MHA rate, even if their remaining courses are online, making hybrid enrollment an important strategic consideration. The Montgomery GI Bill Active Duty (Chapter 30) works differently from the Post-9/11 GI Bill. Rather than paying tuition directly to the school, Chapter 30 pays a flat monthly stipend directly to the veteran. For the 2025-2026 fiscal year, full-time students with three or more years of service receive $2,518 per month. This flat-rate structure can actually be more advantageous for veterans attending inexpensive schools, community colleges, or trade programs where the monthly stipend exceeds the actual tuition cost. Chapter 30 also supports kicker payments and the $600 Buy-Up program, which can increase monthly benefits. Service members contributed $1,200 during their first year of service to participate in the Montgomery GI Bill, making it a program with an upfront buy-in. The Montgomery GI Bill Selected Reserve (Chapter 1606) provides education benefits to members of the Selected Reserve, including the Army Reserve, Navy Reserve, Air Force Reserve, Marine Corps Reserve, Coast Guard Reserve, Army National Guard, and Air National Guard. Chapter 1606 pays a lower monthly rate than Chapters 33 or 30 but does not require active duty service. For the 2025-2026 year, full-time Selected Reserve members receive $485 per month. This calculator helps you navigate all three programs by estimating your specific benefit amounts based on your service history, school choice, enrollment status, and program type. The comparison mode lets you see Post-9/11 versus Montgomery GI Bill benefits side by side, helping you make an informed decision about which program to elect. Key features include Yellow Ribbon Program calculations for private schools, OJT and apprenticeship declining payment schedules, mid-month proration for partial enrollment periods, rural relocation grant eligibility, and tutorial assistance estimates. All GI Bill benefits are tax-free at the federal level, making them even more valuable than equivalent taxable income. Veterans have 36 months of total entitlement, and benefits generally must be used within 15 years of the last discharge date — though the Forever GI Bill eliminated this time limit for service members who served after January 1, 2013. Understanding your benefits thoroughly before enrolling can save thousands of dollars and help you make the most of this hard-earned benefit. Whether you are a recently separated veteran exploring your first degree, an active duty service member planning ahead, or a reservist looking into Chapter 1606 options, this calculator provides the clarity you need to make confident education decisions.
Understanding GI Bill Education Benefits
What Is the GI Bill?
The GI Bill is a collection of federal education benefit programs administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) that help eligible veterans, service members, and their family members pay for college, graduate school, trade programs, apprenticeships, on-the-job training, flight school, correspondence courses, licensing and certification tests, and other approved educational programs. Originally enacted in 1944 as the Servicemen's Readjustment Act, the GI Bill has been updated numerous times, with the current Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) signed into law in 2008 and significantly enhanced by the Forever GI Bill (Harry W. Colmery Veterans Educational Assistance Act) in 2017. Today, the GI Bill covers tuition and fees, provides a monthly housing allowance, offers a books and supplies stipend, and includes additional benefits like Yellow Ribbon Program matching funds for private institutions.
How Are GI Bill Benefits Calculated?
GI Bill benefit amounts depend on the specific chapter (program) you use and several individual factors. For the Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33), your benefit percentage is determined by your cumulative active duty service days after September 10, 2001: 90 days earns 50%, 180 days earns 60%, 545 days earns 70%, 730 days earns 80%, 910 days earns 90%, and 1,095+ days (approximately 36 months) earns 100%. Your tuition coverage equals this percentage applied to the school's tuition (full in-state at public schools, or up to $29,920.95 at private/foreign schools). Your Monthly Housing Allowance equals the E-5 with dependents BAH rate at your school's location, multiplied by both your benefit percentage and your rate of pursuit (enrollment percentage). For Montgomery GI Bill (Chapter 30), benefits are simpler flat monthly rates based on service tier (2-year or 3-year) and enrollment level (full-time through quarter-time), paid directly to the veteran regardless of tuition cost.
Why Does Choosing the Right GI Bill Program Matter?
Choosing between the Post-9/11 GI Bill and the Montgomery GI Bill can mean a difference of thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars in total benefits received. The Post-9/11 GI Bill is generally better for veterans attending expensive private universities or schools in high-cost-of-living areas, because it pays tuition directly to the school (up to $29,920.95 for private institutions) plus a location-based housing allowance that can exceed $3,000 per month in cities like San Francisco or New York. However, the Montgomery GI Bill can be more advantageous for veterans attending low-cost community colleges or trade schools, where the flat monthly stipend ($2,518 for full-time with 3+ years of service) may exceed the actual tuition and provide additional cash flow. Once you elect to use the Post-9/11 GI Bill, you irrevocably give up Montgomery GI Bill eligibility, so this decision warrants careful analysis.
Calculator Limitations and Disclaimer
This calculator provides estimates based on 2025-2026 VA education benefit rates and standard formulas published by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Results are for planning purposes only and are not official VA determinations. Several factors may affect your actual benefits that cannot be fully captured by a calculator: your exact BAH rate depends on your specific school ZIP code (this calculator uses state average estimates); Yellow Ribbon amounts vary by school and program; OJT and apprenticeship payments depend on employer certification and training schedules; and benefit transferability to dependents involves additional eligibility requirements. MHA rates update on August 1 each academic year, and MGIB rates update on October 1 each fiscal year. Always consult your School Certifying Official (SCO), a Veterans Service Organization (VSO), or call the VA education hotline at 1-888-442-4551 for official benefit determinations.
Formulas
The Post-9/11 GI Bill benefit tier is based on cumulative active duty service: 1,095+ days = 100%, 910 days = 90%, 730 days = 80%, 545 days = 70%, 180 days = 60%, 90 days = 50%. Purple Heart recipients and service-connected disability discharges automatically qualify for 100%.
The Monthly Housing Allowance equals the Basic Allowance for Housing rate for an E-5 with dependents at the school's location, multiplied by the veteran's benefit percentage and rate of pursuit. Online-only students receive a flat rate of $1,169/month (2025-2026). Foreign school students receive $2,338/month (national average).
The VA covers tuition and fees up to the annual maximum cap multiplied by the benefit percentage. Public in-state: full tuition. Private/foreign: up to $29,920.95 (2025-2026). Flight: up to $17,097.67. Correspondence: up to $14,533.00.
The school contributes a set amount and the VA matches it dollar-for-dollar. Only available at the 100% benefit tier. Reduces out-of-pocket tuition for private and foreign institutions above the VA cap.
The VA standardizes all months to 30 days for partial-month proration calculations when enrollment starts mid-month.
Montgomery GI Bill (Ch.30) pays a fixed monthly rate based on service tier and enrollment level (3-year full-time: $2,518/month; 2-year full-time: $2,043/month for 2025-2026), plus any college fund kicker or Buy-Up amount.
Total annual benefits combine 12 months of housing allowance, tuition and fee coverage, the books and supplies stipend ($1,000/year at 100%), the rural relocation grant ($500 one-time), and tutorial assistance ($100/month max).
Reference Tables
Post-9/11 GI Bill Benefit Percentage Tiers
| Active Duty Days | Approximate Months | Benefit Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| 1,095+ | 36+ | 100% |
| 910–1,094 | 30–35 | 90% |
| 730–909 | 24–29 | 80% |
| 545–729 | 18–23 | 70% |
| 180–544 | 6–17 | 60% |
| 90–179 | ~3–5 | 50% |
Montgomery GI Bill (Ch.30) Monthly Rates — 2025-2026
| Enrollment Level | 3-Year Service | 2-Year Service |
|---|---|---|
| Full-time | $2,518.00 | $2,043.00 |
| 3/4-time | $1,888.50 | $1,532.25 |
| 1/2-time | $1,259.00 | $1,021.50 |
| Less than 1/2, more than 1/4 | $1,259.00* | $1,021.50* |
| 1/4-time or less | $629.50* | $510.75* |
Post-9/11 Tuition & Fee Caps — 2025-2026
| Institution Type | Maximum Annual Coverage |
|---|---|
| Public (in-state) | Full tuition & mandatory fees |
| Private / Foreign | $29,920.95 |
| Flight Training | $17,097.67 |
| Correspondence | $14,533.00 |
Worked Examples
Post-9/11 GI Bill — Full-Time at Private University
Determine benefit tier: 1,460 days > 1,095 → 100% benefit
Tuition covered by VA: MIN($45,000, $29,920.95) × 100% = $29,920.95
Yellow Ribbon: School $5,000 + VA match $5,000 = $10,000 additional coverage
Out-of-pocket tuition: $45,000 - $29,920.95 - $10,000 = $5,079.05
MHA: E-5 w/deps BAH at school location × 100% × 100% (varies by state)
Books & supplies: $1,000 per year
Total annual benefit: $29,920.95 + $10,000 + (MHA × 12) + $1,000
Montgomery GI Bill — Full-Time with Kicker
Base rate for 3-year service, full-time: $2,518.00/month
Add kicker: $2,518.00 + $200.00 = $2,718.00/month
Annual payment: $2,718.00 × 12 = $32,616.00
Entitlement used: 12 months per year (36 months total available)
Post-9/11 vs Montgomery Comparison — Community College
Post-9/11 (Ch.33): Tuition = $3,500 (fully covered), MHA = $1,200/mo × 12 = $14,400, Books = $1,000. Total ≈ $18,900
Montgomery (Ch.30): $2,518/mo × 12 = $30,216 paid directly to veteran
Ch.30 advantage: $30,216 - $18,900 = $11,316 more per year
Note: Ch.33 pays tuition directly while Ch.30 veteran must pay tuition from stipend
How to Use the GI Bill Calculator
Select Your GI Bill Program
Choose between Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33), Montgomery GI Bill (Chapter 30), or use the Compare Both tab to see a side-by-side analysis. If you served on active duty after September 10, 2001, the Post-9/11 GI Bill is likely your primary option. If you are unsure which program is best for your situation, start with the comparison mode to evaluate both options.
Enter Your Service and School Information
For Post-9/11 GI Bill, enter your cumulative active duty days after September 10, 2001 to determine your benefit percentage tier (50%-100%). Select your school's state, enrollment type (in-person, online, hybrid, or OJT), rate of pursuit (course load percentage), and institution type. For private or foreign schools, enter your annual tuition amount to calculate out-of-pocket costs and Yellow Ribbon eligibility.
Configure Advanced Options
Expand the Advanced Options section to fine-tune your estimate. Enter your school start day for prorated first-month calculations, enable Yellow Ribbon Program for eligible private and foreign schools, include the books and supplies stipend, check rural relocation grant eligibility, add tutorial assistance, or enter a kicker amount for Montgomery GI Bill. These options can significantly affect your total benefit estimate.
Revisa resultados y exporta
Your estimated benefits are displayed instantly with a visual breakdown chart showing housing allowance, tuition coverage, and books stipend proportions. Review the benefit tier table to understand your eligibility percentage. Track your entitlement usage to see how many months of benefits remain. Export your results to CSV for record-keeping or print a summary to share with your School Certifying Official or financial aid office.
Preguntas Frecuentes
How is my Post-9/11 GI Bill benefit percentage determined?
Your benefit percentage is based on your total aggregate active duty service days after September 10, 2001. Serving 1,095 days (approximately 36 months) or more earns 100% benefits. Shorter service periods earn proportionally less: 910-1,094 days equals 90%, 730-909 days equals 80%, 545-729 days equals 70%, 180-544 days equals 60%, and 90-179 days equals 50%. Two special cases grant automatic 100% eligibility regardless of service length: Purple Heart recipients who were honorably discharged after any post-9/11 service, and service members discharged for a service-connected disability after 30 or more continuous days of active duty. Your benefit percentage applies to all components including tuition coverage, Monthly Housing Allowance, and books stipend.
What is the Monthly Housing Allowance (MHA) and how is it calculated?
The MHA is the housing component of the Post-9/11 GI Bill, equivalent to the E-5 with dependents Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) rate for your school's location. It is multiplied by your benefit percentage and your rate of pursuit (course load percentage). You must be pursuing more than 50% of a full-time course load to receive any MHA. Online-only students receive a flat national rate of $1,169 per month for the 2025-2026 academic year, while students taking even one in-person class receive the full location-based rate. Students at foreign institutions receive the national average MHA of $2,338 per month. MHA rates are updated August 1 each academic year, unlike active duty BAH which updates January 1.
What is the Yellow Ribbon Program and who qualifies?
The Yellow Ribbon Program allows participating private and foreign schools to waive a portion of tuition that exceeds the VA's standard cap ($29,920.95 for 2025-2026), with the VA matching the school's contribution dollar-for-dollar. For example, if your school contributes $5,000 and the VA matches it, you receive an additional $10,000 toward tuition. Only veterans at the 100% benefit tier can participate — this excludes those with less than 36 months of active duty service unless they qualify via Purple Heart or service-connected disability discharge. You must confirm Yellow Ribbon participation and contribution amounts with your school's financial aid office, as availability and amounts vary by institution and program.
Post-9/11 vs. Montgomery GI Bill — which is better?
The Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) is usually better for veterans attending expensive private schools or schools in high-cost cities, because it pays tuition directly to the school plus provides a generous location-based housing allowance. The Montgomery GI Bill (Chapter 30) pays a flat monthly stipend regardless of tuition cost — it may actually be better for veterans attending low-cost schools like community colleges where the $2,518 per month flat rate (3-year service, full-time) significantly exceeds actual tuition. Chapter 30 also allows kicker supplements and the $600 Buy-Up program to increase monthly payments. Use the Compare Both tab in this calculator to see which program yields more for your specific situation before making an irrevocable election.
How does the 36-month entitlement work and can I extend it?
Both the Post-9/11 and Montgomery GI Bills provide a maximum of 36 months of entitlement. Each semester or term you use benefits, the VA calculates how many months of entitlement you consume based on your enrollment level. If you switch programs such as from Chapter 30 to Chapter 33, your remaining entitlement carries over. For Post-9/11 benefits, there was traditionally a 15-year time limit from your last discharge date — but the Forever GI Bill of 2017 eliminated this time limit for service members who separated on or after January 1, 2013. STEM students may qualify for the Rogers STEM Scholarship providing up to 9 additional months of entitlement. Licensing tests and tutorial assistance are charged at different entitlement rates than standard enrollment.
Can I use GI Bill benefits for OJT, apprenticeships, or non-college programs?
Yes. Both the Post-9/11 and Montgomery GI Bills cover a wide range of training beyond traditional college: on-the-job training (OJT), registered apprenticeships, vocational schools, non-college degree programs, flight training, correspondence courses, and licensing and certification tests. For OJT and apprenticeships, payment follows a declining schedule under the Post-9/11 GI Bill — starting at 100% of the BAH rate in months 1-6, then decreasing to 80% in months 7-12, 60% in months 13-18, 40% in months 19-24, and 20% from month 25 onward. The Montgomery GI Bill has its own declining OJT schedule. The VA also reimburses up to $2,000 per licensing or certification test and provides up to $1,200 lifetime for tutorial assistance.