07/08/2025                                                                            
                                    
                                                                            
                                            Home care for veterans: What is the VA homemaker and home health aide care program?
The homemaker and home health aide care (H/HHA) program is one of many home and community-based services the VA offers. The goal of the program is to help veterans remain safe and independent while continuing to live in their own homes. Under the supervision of a registered nurse, trained homemakers and home health aides support veterans at home by providing assistance with personal care and daily activities, companionship, and respite care for their family caregivers.
The H/HHA program can also be combined with other VA home and community-based services, but availability may be limited.
Veterans home care benefits
Homemaker and home health aide care may include assistance with a wide range of daily tasks to help veterans continue living safely and independently in their own homes.
VA in-home care services
Homemakers and home health aides can help ensure patient safety and provide assistance with the following instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs):
Light housekeeping necessary to maintain a safe and sanitary environment in areas of the home used by the patient
Laundering essential to the comfort and cleanliness of the patient
Meal preparation
Grocery shopping
Escorting the patient to necessary appointments
VA home health aide care services
Home health aides can provide assistance with the following activities of daily living (ADLs):
Bathing
Toileting
Eating
Dressing
Ambulating or transfers
Active and passive exercises
Assistance with medical equipment
Routine health monitoring
VA home care isn’t just for the benefit of veterans; it also provides their family caregivers with valuable respite time and peace of mind. These services can be used with others, like adult day care, to ease the burden on families and delay or prevent nursing home placement for veterans.
Note that eligibility requirements for skilled home health care services like wound care, catheter care, physical therapy, and occupational therapy are different from those provided through the VA's home health care program.
Read: Home Care vs. Home Health Care: What’s the Difference?
Who is eligible for the veterans home care program?
To receive VA home care assistance, a veteran must meet the following criteria:
Be enrolled in a VA health care benefits package
Qualify for community care services
Have a doctor’s order to receive home care services
These three general criteria are covered in greater detail in the following sections.
Qualifying for VA health care benefits
First, a veteran must be eligible for VA health care benefits. Most veterans who served in the active military, naval, or air service and didn’t receive a dishonorable discharge qualify for the VA’s standard medical benefits package. Typically, older veterans have already applied for and been receiving VA health care benefits long before the need for in-home care arises.
Veterans who aren’t signed up for VA health care but believe they’re eligible for coverage are encouraged to apply online. A veteran can also apply by phone at 877-222-8387, by mailing an application for health benefits form, or in person at a VA medical center or clinic.
Even if a veteran has applied for VA medical benefits before and been denied coverage, it may be worth applying again. Their medical condition and/or financial status may have changed, thereby qualifying them for coverage.
The VA assigns each applicant to a priority group based on their military service history, disability rating, income level, and whether they qualify for/are receiving other benefits like Medicaid, a VA pension, or VA disability compensation. A veteran’s priority group determines how soon they’re enrolled in health care benefits and how much (if anything) they’ll pay toward the cost of their care. Veterans with service-connected disabilities are assigned to the highest priority group, according to the VA.
Qualifying for VA community care services
Next, a veteran with VA health care coverage must also qualify for community care. When the VA can’t provide the care a veteran needs, community providers may be approved to deliver these services. The VA MISSION Act of 2018 established six expanded eligibility criteria for community care. Only one of these six requirements must be met. One criterion that triggers eligibility is that “no VA facility offers the hospital care, medical services, or extended care services the veteran requires.”
The H/HHA program is unique in that these extended care services are provided exclusively through non-VA providers in the community: public and private home care agencies. Since the VA doesn’t directly provide homemaker or home health aide services, any veteran seeking them qualifies for community care automatically.
Qualifying for H/HHA services
Lastly, a veteran must demonstrate a clinical need for H/HHA services. Their VA primary care provider or a geriatrics care team will conduct a comprehensive geriatric evaluation to assess their health and level of dependence in activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living.
A veteran meets clinical eligibility criteria for the VA homemaker and home health aide program if their assessment identifies one of the following:
Dependencies in three or more ADLs
Significant cognitive impairment
Dependencies in two ADLs and the veteran meets any two of the following conditions:
Has dependencies in three or more IADLs
Is 75 years old or older
Has been diagnosed with clinical depression
Lives alone in the community
Has been recently discharged from a nursing facility, or has an upcoming nursing home discharge plan contingent on the receipt of home and community based care services
Has demonstrated high use of medical services defined as three or more hospitalizations in the past year, or has utilized outpatient clinics or emergency evaluation units 12 or more times in the past year
A formal care plan will document the findings of the official assessment, establish goals of care, and recommend the type(s) and duration of services needed. If a veteran meets the three general criteria above, then their VA primary care provider will order the appropriate H/HHA services and possibly others to supplement this care. Keep in mind that it's possible for a veteran who doesn’t strictly meet the criteria above to demonstrate a clinical need for in-home care and receive an order for services.
Once a VA staff member confirms a veteran’s eligibility for the H/HHA program, they’re referred to a home care agency in the VA’s community care network.