Estimate your Chapter 33 housing allowance, tuition coverage, Yellow Ribbon, and remaining entitlement
The Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) is one of the most comprehensive education benefit programs available to U.S. military veterans, service members, and certain dependents. Signed into law in 2008, it replaced and expanded upon the older Montgomery GI Bill to reflect the realities of post-9/11 service. For qualifying veterans, it can cover the full cost of a public in-state college degree, provide a generous monthly housing allowance tied to local rental rates, and supply up to $1,000 per year for books and supplies — all tax-free. Understanding exactly what you qualify for can be surprisingly complex. Your benefit percentage depends on your aggregate days of active duty service after September 10, 2001, ranging from 50 percent for 90 to 179 days all the way to 100 percent for 1,095 or more days (about three years). Special qualifiers — including Purple Heart recipients and veterans honorably discharged after 30+ continuous days due to a service-connected disability — automatically receive 100 percent eligibility regardless of service length. The Monthly Housing Allowance (MHA) is where the Post-9/11 GI Bill truly stands out. Unlike a flat national rate, your MHA is based on the E-5 with dependents Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) rate for the ZIP code of your school, not your home address. In high-cost areas like San Francisco or New York City, this can exceed $4,000 per month for full-time in-person enrollment. For fully online students, a flat national rate applies ($1,169/month in 2025-26; $1,261/month in 2026-27). Foreign schools use the national average MHA rate. Crucially, if even one class in your semester is in-person, the full in-person BAH rate applies — not the online flat rate. Tuition coverage varies by school type. Public in-state institutions are covered at 100% of net tuition and mandatory fees — no dollar cap. Private and foreign institutions are subject to an annual cap ($29,920.95 for 2025-26; $30,908.34 for 2026-27). Flight training and correspondence schools have lower caps. The Yellow Ribbon Program, available only to veterans at 100% eligibility, allows participating private schools to voluntarily fund tuition above the cap, with the VA matching each dollar the school contributes. Your entitlement is capped at 36 months for a single qualifying period of service. Under the 2024 Rudisill Supreme Court decision, veterans with two or more qualifying service periods can accumulate up to 48 months across GI Bill programs. The Forever GI Bill (Harry W. Colmery Act, 2017) eliminated the old 15-year use-by deadline for veterans with service ending on or after January 1, 2013 — if you qualify, your benefits never expire. This calculator goes deeper than most: it includes ZIP code-based MHA estimates, OJT declining payment schedules, Yellow Ribbon step-by-step calculation, entitlement burn-down tracking, mid-month proration, and a complete breakdown of your annual benefit value. Use it to plan your education budget, compare schools in different cities, and understand exactly how much your service has earned you.
Understanding the Post-9/11 GI Bill
What Is the Post-9/11 GI Bill?
The Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) is a federal education benefit for veterans who served at least 90 days of active duty after September 10, 2001. It pays tuition directly to the school, provides a monthly housing allowance based on local BAH rates, and supplies an annual book and supply stipend. Benefits can be used at public or private universities, community colleges, vocational schools, foreign institutions, and for on-the-job training or apprenticeships. The benefit percentage — ranging from 50% to 100% — is determined by total days of qualifying service, with special 100% qualifiers for Purple Heart recipients and certain medical discharges. Benefits are completely tax-free and do not count as earned income.
How Are Benefits Calculated?
Your benefit percentage tiers from 50% (90-179 days of service) to 100% (1,095+ days). Monthly Housing Allowance equals the E-5 with dependents BAH rate at your school's ZIP code, multiplied by your benefit percentage and rate of pursuit. Rate of pursuit is your credit hours divided by full-time hours (typically 12), rounded up to the nearest 10%. You must exceed 50% enrollment to receive any MHA. Online students receive a flat national rate instead of ZIP-based BAH. Tuition is covered up to the full in-state rate for public schools, or the annual private cap for private/foreign schools. The Yellow Ribbon program can cover tuition above the private cap, but only for veterans at exactly 100% eligibility. Book stipends are calculated at $41.67 per credit hour, up to $1,000 per year.
Why the Post-9/11 GI Bill Matters
The Post-9/11 GI Bill represents one of the largest education investments a veteran can receive — potentially $50,000 to $100,000 or more in combined tuition, housing, and stipend benefits over a 4-year degree. Choosing a school in a high-BAH city like San Francisco versus a lower-cost city like Memphis can mean a difference of $30,000 or more in housing benefits alone over four years. Understanding your benefit tier before enrolling lets you plan which schools are fully covered, whether Yellow Ribbon participation is needed, and how many months of entitlement remain. Veterans who served on active duty for at least three years qualify for full 100% benefits that can cover the complete cost of attendance at many public universities.
Limitações e advertências
This calculator uses representative BAH rates for major U.S. cities based on curated DoD data. If your school's ZIP code is not in our embedded table, the calculator falls back to the national average BAH rate ($2,338/month for 2025-26). Actual BAH rates vary by ZIP code and are set annually by the Department of Defense effective August 1 — the effective date for GI Bill MHA, not January 1. MHA rates are protected from BAH decreases once locked in (rates only change if you change schools, programs, enrollment percentage, or take a 6+ month break). Always verify your exact benefit with the VA and your school's certifying official before making financial decisions. Active duty service members living on base receive $0 MHA. This tool does not constitute official VA advice.
Formulas
Reference Tables
2025-26 Annual Caps
2026-27 Annual Caps
OJT Declining Payment Schedule
Como Usar Esta Calculadora
Enter Your Service Duration
Input the total number of active duty days you served after September 10, 2001. The calculator automatically determines your benefit percentage tier (50% to 100%). Check the special qualifier box if you received a Purple Heart or were discharged due to a service-connected disability — these grant automatic 100% eligibility.
Select School Type and Enrollment Mode
Choose your institution type (public, private, community college, OJT, etc.) and whether you will attend in-person, online-only, or hybrid. This is critical: online students receive a flat national MHA rate ($1,169/month in 2025-26), while in-person or hybrid students receive the local BAH rate. Enter your school's ZIP code for a location-specific MHA estimate.
Open Advanced Options for Tuition Details
Click 'Advanced Options' to enter your annual tuition, scholarships, and Yellow Ribbon details. The calculator will show your net out-of-pocket cost after VA coverage. If you attend a private university at 100% eligibility, enter your school's Yellow Ribbon contribution amount to see the VA match and remaining gap.
Review Your Full Benefit Summary
Review your monthly MHA, annual tuition coverage, book stipend, and total annual benefit value. Use the entitlement tracker to see how many of your 36 (or 48) months remain. Export to CSV or print for your records. Compare your benefit at different ZIP codes by simply changing the school ZIP and recalculating.
Perguntas Frequentes
What is the maximum Monthly Housing Allowance (MHA) under the Post-9/11 GI Bill?
There is no single maximum MHA — it depends on your school's location. MHA equals the E-5 with dependents BAH rate for the school's ZIP code, multiplied by your benefit percentage and rate of pursuit. In high-cost cities like San Francisco ($4,308/month BAH) or New York City ($3,969/month), full-time in-person students at 100% eligibility receive the full rate. Online-only students receive a flat $1,169/month (2025-26) or $1,261/month (2026-27) regardless of school location. Active duty members living on base receive $0 MHA regardless of eligibility percentage.
How does the Yellow Ribbon Program work?
The Yellow Ribbon Program is a supplement for 100%-eligible veterans at private universities whose tuition exceeds the VA's annual private cap ($29,920.95 in 2025-26). Participating schools voluntarily contribute a dollar amount above the cap, and the VA matches that contribution dollar-for-dollar. For example, if your school contributes $7,500 and VA matches $7,500, you receive $15,000 in Yellow Ribbon coverage above the regular cap. Yellow Ribbon is only available to veterans at exactly 100% benefit eligibility — it does not apply at 90% or lower. Not all private schools participate; check the VA's GI Bill Comparison Tool for school participation status.
What is the difference between in-person and hybrid enrollment for MHA?
The rule is simple: if ANY class in your semester includes at least one in-person meeting, you qualify for the full local BAH rate — not the online flat rate. 'Hybrid' enrollment means you take a mix of online and in-person classes, but since at least one class has an in-person component, the full BAH rate applies. This makes a dramatic difference: a student in Washington, DC taking one in-person class receives $3,600/month in MHA versus $1,169/month for fully online enrollment — a difference of $2,431 per month, or over $21,000 annually for a 9-month academic year.
How much entitlement do I have, and does it ever expire?
Veterans with a single qualifying service period have 36 months of entitlement. Under the 2024 Rudisill Supreme Court decision, veterans with two or more qualifying service periods across different GI Bill programs can accumulate up to 48 months total. For veterans whose service ended on or after January 1, 2013, the Forever GI Bill (Harry W. Colmery Act, 2017) eliminated the old 15-year use-by deadline — your benefits have no expiration date. Veterans with service ending before January 1, 2013 must use their benefits within 15 years of their discharge date.
How does OJT/Apprenticeship payment work under the Post-9/11 GI Bill?
On-the-job training and apprenticeship programs receive a BAH-equivalent monthly stipend on a declining schedule rather than tuition payments. In the first 6 months you receive 100% of the E-5 with dependents BAH rate for the training location; months 7-12 receive 80%; months 13-18 receive 60%; months 19-24 receive 40%; month 25 and beyond receive 20%. Each payment is also multiplied by your benefit percentage. For example, a veteran at 100% eligibility in Denver ($2,298/month BAH) in month 3 of training receives $2,298/month; by month 20, that drops to $919/month.
What counts as qualifying service for the Post-9/11 GI Bill?
Active duty service after September 10, 2001 generally qualifies, but there are important exclusions. The following do NOT count: civilian school assignments paid by the military, attendance at a service academy, initial skills training for National Guard and Reserve members activated under certain authorities, and some emergency activations. Qualifying service includes active duty in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard, as well as certain National Guard and Reserve activations under Title 10 (federal) orders. Purple Heart recipients and those discharged due to service-connected disabilities (after 30+ continuous days) qualify automatically for 100% regardless of aggregate service days.