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2026 VA Budget Bill Narrowly Passed by House Appropriations Committee
The US House Appropriations Committee approved a $453 billion budget to fund the US Department of Veterans (VA), military construction, and other programs in 2026 by a 36-27 vote. The bill includes $34 billion proposed for community care programs, an increase of > 50% from 2025 community care funding levels.
The discretionary funding would also send $2.5 billion to the VA electronic health records modernization program. Mandatory spending includes $53 billion for the Toxic Exposures Fund, which supports benefits and health care costs associated with the PACT Act.
Although VA budget bills are typically bipartisan in nature, this bill passed by a much narrower margin than is typical. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), ranking member of the Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Subcommittee, said the bill “diverts far too many resources away from the vital, VA-based care that veterans consistently tell us they want, and it pushes them into pricier, subpar corporate hospitals.”
Committee Democrats offered dozens of amendments. All amendments were rejected except for a modification that would block staff reductions at the Veterans Crisis Line and other VA suicide prevention programs.
The bill now moves to the full House of Representatives for consideration. House leaders have not yet announced when that vote will take place; the House is in recess the week of June 16, 2025.
The committee also released the Fiscal Year 2026 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Bill, which would spend > $83 million, a 22% increase over the 2025.
The US House Appropriations Committee approved a $453 billion budget to fund the US Department of Veterans (VA), military construction, and other programs in 2026 by a 36-27 vote. The bill includes $34 billion proposed for community care programs, an increase of > 50% from 2025 community care funding levels.
The discretionary funding would also send $2.5 billion to the VA electronic health records modernization program. Mandatory spending includes $53 billion for the Toxic Exposures Fund, which supports benefits and health care costs associated with the PACT Act.
Although VA budget bills are typically bipartisan in nature, this bill passed by a much narrower margin than is typical. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), ranking member of the Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Subcommittee, said the bill “diverts far too many resources away from the vital, VA-based care that veterans consistently tell us they want, and it pushes them into pricier, subpar corporate hospitals.”
Committee Democrats offered dozens of amendments. All amendments were rejected except for a modification that would block staff reductions at the Veterans Crisis Line and other VA suicide prevention programs.
The bill now moves to the full House of Representatives for consideration. House leaders have not yet announced when that vote will take place; the House is in recess the week of June 16, 2025.
The committee also released the Fiscal Year 2026 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Bill, which would spend > $83 million, a 22% increase over the 2025.
The US House Appropriations Committee approved a $453 billion budget to fund the US Department of Veterans (VA), military construction, and other programs in 2026 by a 36-27 vote. The bill includes $34 billion proposed for community care programs, an increase of > 50% from 2025 community care funding levels.
The discretionary funding would also send $2.5 billion to the VA electronic health records modernization program. Mandatory spending includes $53 billion for the Toxic Exposures Fund, which supports benefits and health care costs associated with the PACT Act.
Although VA budget bills are typically bipartisan in nature, this bill passed by a much narrower margin than is typical. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), ranking member of the Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Subcommittee, said the bill “diverts far too many resources away from the vital, VA-based care that veterans consistently tell us they want, and it pushes them into pricier, subpar corporate hospitals.”
Committee Democrats offered dozens of amendments. All amendments were rejected except for a modification that would block staff reductions at the Veterans Crisis Line and other VA suicide prevention programs.
The bill now moves to the full House of Representatives for consideration. House leaders have not yet announced when that vote will take place; the House is in recess the week of June 16, 2025.
The committee also released the Fiscal Year 2026 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Bill, which would spend > $83 million, a 22% increase over the 2025.
2026 VA Budget Bill Narrowly Passed by House Appropriations Committee
2026 VA Budget Bill Narrowly Passed by House Appropriations Committee