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What About Non-career Veterans and Their VA Healthcare? – Ask Rusty

Posted on Monday, June 16, 2025
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by Russell Gloor, AMAC Certified Social Security Advisor
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Dear Rusty: In your answer to the retired U.S. Navy veteran about why he is forced to enroll in Medicare, you focused on military TriCare’s requirement for the member to enroll in Medicare. But you said nothing about regular VA healthcare. If a non-career veteran is eligible for VA healthcare, couldn’t that be used in place of Medicare? Signed: Veteran Advocate 

Dear Veteran Advocate: Thank you for your feedback.  FYI, I have previously explained that veterans who rely on the VA for 100% of their healthcare can, indeed, disenroll from Medicare Part B (thus saving the monthly Part B premium). I don’t personally recommend it because of my personal experience, but it certainly is possible to do so.  

Personally, I use the VA for some of my healthcare needs – usually an annual checkup and optometry services – at my local VA clinic which is only a mile away from where I live. But for any extensive treatment needs (medical tests, etc.) I must travel about 40 miles to the nearest VA hospital facility.  For contrast, I have numerous private healthcare services, specialists, and hospitals very near where I live, but to use them under the VA I must get VA preapproval and use only certain VA-approved providers, which is inconvenient for me. Personally, I prefer the freedom to go to any healthcare service provider I choose, without restriction, at any time I need to. So, I use my VA coverage when it is convenient for me but rely also on non-VA, Medicare-approved specialists who I can choose to use (or not) at will. For me, it’s a matter of convenience and the freedom to use whichever healthcare provider I want. That said, I fully understand that some veterans rely exclusively on the VA for their healthcare needs, and I have explained to many who have written to me that they have that option. I have also published several public articles about this as well. Here is one such article: 

So, please rest assured that we regularly advise our veterans about their healthcare options under Medicare, including the ability to decline Medicare Part B coverage if they have full VA healthcare coverage. FYI, free Medicare Part A (inpatient hospitalization coverage) is mandatory to collect Social Security after age 65, but Medicare Part B coverage is always optional because there is a premium associated with Part B. A veteran can decline Medicare Part B coverage and save that monthly premium, but they would need to contact Social Security to do so.  Social Security will want to interview the veteran to ensure they are aware of the potential financial consequences of not having Medicare Part B. And they may need to file form CMS-1763 (Request for Termination) But a non-career veteran can opt out of Medicare Part B if they get all of their healthcare services through the Veterans Administration. 

This article is intended for information purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association (NSSA). NSSA and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity. To submit a question, visit our website (amacfoundation.org/programs/social-security-advisory) or email us at [email protected].

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bill
bill
11 months ago

In january of twenty twenty three I turned sixty five and signed up for medicare. I’m glad I did because three weeks later I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. I don’t know if the VA treats cancer or not but the hospital I got my treatment from is fifteen minutes from where I live.
I separated from the Air Force in 1982 and it wasn’t until October of 2023 that I learned that I was eligible for V.A. benefits. By that time my cancer treatment was over. The bills totalled a quarter million dollars and I paid less than ten thousand out of pocket.
Just over a year ago I completed enrollment with the veterans administration and as Rusty does, and for the he same reasons, I use it as a supplement for medicare.
In addition the veterans administration issued hearing aids and determined by hearing loss was Service connected and I was giving a disability rating for which I now receive a monthly check.
Unless someone has a 100% disability rating there are things that the veterans administration does not cover such as dental, which medicare does.
My back Rusty 100%. Get your full medicare coverage. It’s well worth it.

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