Posted on Dec 6, 2025
Has anybody ever dealt with your state-level Department of Veterans Affairs (not the federal VA)?
256
12
11
1
1
0
Edited 17 h ago
Posted 17 h ago
Responses: 3
Every state, territory and federal enclave (D.C.) has a veterans department as part of their state/local/district administration (I’ll refer to them as “state” and “offices”). Except for the American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands, they are listed on the Veterans Administration’s External Resources page* (the other two can easily be found by doing an internet search). Names differ, but most are named a variation of (Office/Department) of Veterans (Affairs/Services).
The meme is misleading because the offices are fully integrated with the VA’s Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA). The key difference is that the offices are state-run agencies and funded by the state (although the VA does give them grants for various state-level projects such as State Veterans Homes) and that they oversee the different state-level programs (these differ between the states). As such, every veteran that has interacted with the VA has touched or been touched by their state's office, regardless of their awareness of the interaction.
State offices are absolutely not “just another layer of bureaucracy”, but an integral part of the VA’s mission of delivering benefits and services to veterans*. To your question about how worthwhile they are, that depends. What specific aspect are you looking at? Processing veterans disability claims? Representing the veteran on appeals? Other type of claims? Connecting state-level resources to the veterans? Outreach? Etc.
As you are doing a research project, I suggest that you might find it helpful to do an internet search for, “how do the state veterans affairs offices interact with the va?” and start the data mining. Additionally, I would recommend you go to the Army’s benefit website, specifically the page* which lays out the various State/Territory benefits for service members, both actively serving or ones that have separated (retired/veteran).
-------------------------------------------
* U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs – listing of State Veterans Affairs Offices - https://discover.va.gov/external-resources/?_resource_type=state-veterans-affairs-office
* VA article - State-level Veterans affairs departments work hand-in-hand with VA to deliver crucial benefits and services - https://news.va.gov/35871/state-level-veterans-affairs-departments-work-hand-in-hand-with-va-to-delivery-crucial-benefits-and-services/
* MyArmyBenefits webpage for State/Territory Benefits - https://myarmybenefits.us.army.mil/Benefit-Library/State/Territory-Benefits
The meme is misleading because the offices are fully integrated with the VA’s Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA). The key difference is that the offices are state-run agencies and funded by the state (although the VA does give them grants for various state-level projects such as State Veterans Homes) and that they oversee the different state-level programs (these differ between the states). As such, every veteran that has interacted with the VA has touched or been touched by their state's office, regardless of their awareness of the interaction.
State offices are absolutely not “just another layer of bureaucracy”, but an integral part of the VA’s mission of delivering benefits and services to veterans*. To your question about how worthwhile they are, that depends. What specific aspect are you looking at? Processing veterans disability claims? Representing the veteran on appeals? Other type of claims? Connecting state-level resources to the veterans? Outreach? Etc.
As you are doing a research project, I suggest that you might find it helpful to do an internet search for, “how do the state veterans affairs offices interact with the va?” and start the data mining. Additionally, I would recommend you go to the Army’s benefit website, specifically the page* which lays out the various State/Territory benefits for service members, both actively serving or ones that have separated (retired/veteran).
-------------------------------------------
* U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs – listing of State Veterans Affairs Offices - https://discover.va.gov/external-resources/?_resource_type=state-veterans-affairs-office
* VA article - State-level Veterans affairs departments work hand-in-hand with VA to deliver crucial benefits and services - https://news.va.gov/35871/state-level-veterans-affairs-departments-work-hand-in-hand-with-va-to-delivery-crucial-benefits-and-services/
* MyArmyBenefits webpage for State/Territory Benefits - https://myarmybenefits.us.army.mil/Benefit-Library/State/Territory-Benefits
External Resources — DiscoverVA
A listing of external resources providing services to Veterans. This includes other State Veterans Affairs offices and Federal agencies.
(2)
(0)
COL Randall C.
LTC (Join to see), Looking at your comments to the other posters, and assuming you're going to ask the same of me, I wasn't aware that my state, and every other state/territory had a Department of Veterans Affairs, until I was working with the state on the stand-up/evolution of cyber operations and capabilities in Virginia.
When service members go through the mandatory separation briefings, they are informed of the state-level offices as part of the VA's set of briefings. I can't vouch that the departing service members 'internalize' that information, but most do if they have any disability claims with the VA.
When service members go through the mandatory separation briefings, they are informed of the state-level offices as part of the VA's set of briefings. I can't vouch that the departing service members 'internalize' that information, but most do if they have any disability claims with the VA.
(0)
(0)
LTC (Join to see) the federal VA is the source for what benefits a veteran qualifies to receive. The State VA has representatives to help veterans get paperwork completed and sent in to the Department of Veterans Affairs. Call the [login to see] National VA Call Center for a better explanation.
(2)
(0)
I Had A Pennsylvania State VA Representative Who Busted His Butt From 2002-2007 To Get Me Upgraded From 30%To 100% .
He Did All The Paperwork,Set Up My Appointments And Even Went With Me To My Final Determination Appointment And Spoke As My Advocate.
When I Was Awarded 100% He Set Up The Appointment At The Closest DEERs Office For My Wife And I To Get Our ID Cards.
Did All The Paperwork To Get My Wife Enrolled In CHAMPVA Health Care.
He Did All The Paperwork,Set Up My Appointments And Even Went With Me To My Final Determination Appointment And Spoke As My Advocate.
When I Was Awarded 100% He Set Up The Appointment At The Closest DEERs Office For My Wife And I To Get Our ID Cards.
Did All The Paperwork To Get My Wife Enrolled In CHAMPVA Health Care.
(1)
(0)
LTC (Join to see)
SPC James Neidig That’s the kind of State VA rep every vet dreams about. Thanks for sharing the win.
Quick follow-up a lot of us are curious about: When you first started working with him, did you even know Pennsylvania HAD its own state-level veterans office, or did you just luck into finding him? And once you saw how much extra he could do that the federal VA wouldn’t, did that change how you think about what a ‘state VA’ could actually be?
Quick follow-up a lot of us are curious about: When you first started working with him, did you even know Pennsylvania HAD its own state-level veterans office, or did you just luck into finding him? And once you saw how much extra he could do that the federal VA wouldn’t, did that change how you think about what a ‘state VA’ could actually be?
(0)
(0)
Read This Next


Benefits
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
