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Veteran Benefits & Financial Planning Guide | Global View
Financial Planning for Veterans: Benefits and an Integrated Strategy to Secure Your Future
In the transition from military to civilian life, navigating the financial landscape is likely to be complex. From managing multiple sources of income, such as disability compensation and retirement pay, to understanding how the benefits you’ve earned align with your long-term goals, financial planning plays an important role in helping veterans to organize and evaluate how their benefits and resources work together over time.
The Importance of Veteran Financial Planning
For veterans, financial planning doesn’t begin with a blank slate. Instead, they transition into civilian life with established benefits and income sources that may evolve over time. These factors can include military retirement pay, disability compensation, healthcare benefits, education assistance, and, in some cases, survivor benefits for families. At the same time, veterans may also be entering new roles in the civilian workforce, planning for the future of their families, or adjusting to changes in cost of living and location.
With this range of separate moving parts, coordinating finances is both complicated and vital for veterans, particularly when it comes to long-term planning, such as retirement, investment, and tax strategies. Without a thorough plan, it can be difficult to understand what role each piece plays in building long-term financial stability.
Understanding Key Veteran Benefits
As a veteran, you may have access to important programs and benefits that can impact your finances. Though navigating them may feel complicated and overwhelming, it’s important to comprehensively review and understand the benefits you’re eligible for in order to best integrate them into your financial plan.
Here are some key benefits to know:
- VA disability compensation: Veterans with service-connected disabilities may qualify for monthly tax-free compensation, which can provide a valuable source of income and impact retirement, tax, and investment planning decisions.
- Military retirement benefits: Eligible retirees may receive a military pension that can serve as a source of retirement income.
- VA home loans: VA-backed home loans are a lifetime benefit that can provide favorable financing opportunities, including no down payment requirements, competitive interest rates, and limited closing costs.
- VA healthcare benefits: Access to healthcare through the VA may help reduce medical expenses and enhance your quality of life by providing coverage for health services from routine care to prescriptions and specialized treatment.
- GI Bill education benefits: Education benefits can help cover the cost of college, graduate programs, certifications, and job training, reducing out-of-pocket expenses while supporting career advancement.
- Veterans' life insurance programs: Programs such as VGLI, SGLI, and other VA-sponsored programs can help veterans and their families secure life insurance protection that may be difficult or more expensive to obtain elsewhere.
- Survivor benefits: Certain programs provide financial support and benefits to spouses and dependents, making them an important consideration in estate and legacy planning.
- State veteran benefits: Many states offer additional benefits, such as property tax exemptions, education assistance, employment programs, and other financial incentives that can complement federal benefits.
Thoroughly researching the available programs is vital to understanding how the benefits you’ve earned can help secure your financial future. Finding an advisor with specialized knowledge in veteran financial planning can ease this process while uncovering the best ways to leverage your benefits.
Four Pillars of Financial Stability for Veterans
Understanding available benefits is an important first step, but long-term financial security requires more than simply knowing what resources exist. Veterans who successfully build financial stability often take a coordinated approach that integrates benefits, retirement planning, investment strategies, and long-term goals into a single financial framework.
A helpful way to think about veteran financial planning is through four pillars:
|
Pillar |
Key Considerations |
|
Retirement Planning |
Coordinate military retirement benefits, Social Security, employer-sponsored retirement plans, and accounts such as the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP), 401(k)s, and IRAs to create a sustainable long-term income strategy. |
|
Investment Planning |
Build an investment strategy that aligns with your long-term goals and risk tolerance while considering how military pensions, disability compensation, and other income sources fit into the overall picture. |
|
Family & Legacy Planning |
Evaluate education-funding opportunities, survivor benefits, life insurance programs, and estate-planning options to help support your family's future. |
|
Emergency Savings |
Maintain dedicated savings to help cover unexpected expenses, employment transitions, relocation costs, healthcare needs, or temporary gaps in income without disrupting long-term financial goals. Many experts recommend maintaining three to six months of essential living expenses in an emergency fund. |
While integrating these considerations into a comprehensive financial plan, ask yourself these questions:
- Are you maximizing the benefits available to you?
- How do your military and civilian retirement resources work together?
- Do your investments align with your long-term goals?
- Do you have adequate emergency savings?
- Have you considered how your plan supports your spouse, children, or other dependents?
Building a financial plan around these pillars helps ensure that each part of your financial life is working together rather than in isolation. A coordinated plan helps you not only to understand the benefits you’ve earned but also how to best use them for your financial future.
The Global View Approach to Veteran Planning
Backed by real veteran experience, we take a coordinated approach to help veterans navigate how their benefits interact with their long-term financial goals. Our approach is holistic, including the strategic use of the GI Bill for education planning, college funding strategies for children of disabled veterans, survivor benefit planning for spouses, and the integration of state and federal veteran benefits into a comprehensive retirement and investment plan.
Our perspective is strengthened by Financial Advisor & CFP® Shane Kozusko, whose firsthand experience as a veteran and son of a retired military officer gives him personal expertise on the challenges that veterans face when navigating the VA system. With his insight, our guidance goes beyond textbook knowledge to best support veterans at every stage of military and post-military life.
If you’re a veteran looking to build your next chapter, we’d love to connect. Contact us online or give our office a call.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much money does a 100% disabled veteran receive?
Disability compensation varies based on annual VA disability ratings and individual circumstances. Because benefits may interact with other income sources, they should be reviewed as part of a full financial plan rather than in isolation.
What is the best investment account for veterans?
There is no single best account for veterans. The right investment strategy depends on income sources, risk tolerance, retirement benefits, and long-term goals. An experienced financial planner can help you find the best route for your unique situation.
Do veterans get special investment programs or loans?
Some institutions offer veteran-focused lending or banking programs, such as VA home loans or select credit union benefits. However, long-term financial planning typically requires integrating these tools into a broader strategy.
Should veterans use a VA home loan?
VA home loans can offer significant advantages for qualified borrowers, but the decision to purchase a home should be evaluated within the context of affordability and overall financial goals.
Is military retirement pay enough to retire comfortably?
Military retirement benefits can provide a valuable source of income, but many veterans find that additional savings and investments are necessary to support their desired retirement lifestyle.
Written by Shane Kozusko
As a Paraplanner, Shane works alongside our Advisors in managing client relationships and special financial planning needs, including retirement transition, education, and estate planning. He joined the Global View team upon graduating from the University of Georgia with a BS in Financial Planning in 2022 and passing the Series 65 Uniform Investment Adviser Law Exam. Prior to attending the University of Georgia, Shane spent five years in the United States Army as an Infantryman with two deployments to Afghanistan. He is currently pursuing his Certified Financial Planner designation.
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