GI Bill Changes Are Coming in 2021

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Congress has passed legislation making several changes to benefits administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs and sent it to President Donald Trump's desk to be signed into law.

The legislation, known as the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe, M.D. Veterans Health Care and Benefits Improvements Act of 2020, makes several changes to existing benefit programs.

Here are some of the important changes coming to your GI Bill benefits for 2021.

John J. Fry Scholarship

The John J Fry Scholarship program will be expanded to include the surviving spouses or children of reservists or National Guard members who died as a result of their service, either in the line-of-duty or as a result of service-connected injuries or illness.

Related: Troops With Debilitating Cases of COVID-19, or Their Survivors, to Be Eligible for VA Disability Pay

Previously, survivors or reservists or Guard members were eligible only if the service member’s death was related to active-duty service.

Montgomery GI Bill

The VA will finally pull the plug on the Montgomery GI Bill. The program, which requires military members to contribute $1,200 of their pay, is scheduled to go away beginning in 2030. In 2019, only around 22,000 military members and veterans used the Montgomery GI Bill Active Duty program, which pays substantially less in benefits than the Post-9/11 GI Bill, which had more than 714,000 participants in 2019.

In-State Tuition

Beginning Aug. 1, 2021, public schools will be required to charge all GI Bill recipients the in-state tuition rate for classes. This change will remove the current restriction that requires schools to charge in-state tuition only for GI Bill recipients within three years of their discharge date.

Now, all veterans and dependents using transferred GI Bill benefits will be charged in-state tuition, regardless of when the veteran left service.

Post-9/11 GI Bill Certification of Attendance

Also beginning Aug. 1, 2021, all Post-9/11 GI Bill and Fry Scholarship users will be required to certify their attendance to the VA before they receive payment. GI Bill users will be able to visit a VA website and certify their attendance online. If they don't certify their attendance to the VA for two months in a row, their Monthly Housing Allowance payments will end.

Keep Up With Your Education Benefits

Whether you need a guide on how to use your GI Bill, want to take advantage of tuition assistance and scholarships, or get the lowdown on education benefits available for your family, Military.com can help. Subscribe to Military.com to have education tips and benefits updates delivered directly to your inbox.

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