SPC(P) Brandon Jenkins 6635723 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Clarification: I receive a VA disability compensation while I am also a TPU reservist, which prevents me from drawing income from both sources simultaneously. I have elected to give up drill pay in favor of my higher paying disability pay. Here is the problem: drill pay is taxable, so when Uncle Sam comes to collect, will he be taking back my gross drill pay, or my net drill pay? Can the federal government double tax my drill pay debt? 2021-01-06T08:31:15-05:00 SPC(P) Brandon Jenkins 6635723 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Clarification: I receive a VA disability compensation while I am also a TPU reservist, which prevents me from drawing income from both sources simultaneously. I have elected to give up drill pay in favor of my higher paying disability pay. Here is the problem: drill pay is taxable, so when Uncle Sam comes to collect, will he be taking back my gross drill pay, or my net drill pay? Can the federal government double tax my drill pay debt? 2021-01-06T08:31:15-05:00 2021-01-06T08:31:15-05:00 Wayne Soares 6636886 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Thanks for the question Brandon Response by Wayne Soares made Jan 6 at 2021 8:57 PM 2021-01-06T20:57:48-05:00 2021-01-06T20:57:48-05:00 LTC Private RallyPoint Member 6637041 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>You are not doing this right. You should collect drill pay and inform the VA of how many drill periods you do a year. They will back out your disability pay for only those days! Response by LTC Private RallyPoint Member made Jan 6 at 2021 9:41 PM 2021-01-06T21:41:06-05:00 2021-01-06T21:41:06-05:00 MAJ Ken Landgren 6637084 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>They won&#39;t tax you on income you don&#39;t receive. Response by MAJ Ken Landgren made Jan 6 at 2021 10:00 PM 2021-01-06T22:00:48-05:00 2021-01-06T22:00:48-05:00 CPT Lawrence Cable 6637307 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Why would your drill pay be less than your VA payment, you shouldn&#39;t be able to enlist with 100 percent disability? It is normally to your advantage to take the Drill Pay and forgo the VA payment for the days you drill. If you do nothing, the VA will just deduct the overpayments for those days from you first couple of months payment until the overpayment is met. Response by CPT Lawrence Cable made Jan 6 at 2021 11:46 PM 2021-01-06T23:46:02-05:00 2021-01-06T23:46:02-05:00 MAJ Ken Landgren 6640887 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I ❤️ tax season. I always get about $7,000 back :) What is even better is my wife is a procrastinator so we have not done this years taxes yet, so I am looking at $14,000 in a few months. Response by MAJ Ken Landgren made Jan 7 at 2021 10:06 PM 2021-01-07T22:06:19-05:00 2021-01-07T22:06:19-05:00 2021-01-06T08:31:15-05:00