New law to increase veteran disability payments is business as usual

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World War II veteran Ceo Bauer during an International D-Day Remembrance Ceremony at the Utah Beach American Memorial, June 6, 2025. (U.S. Army)

Veterans with a disability rating might have seen the news that a new bill in the Senate would increase their disability payments. While it’s certainly good news (and necessary legislation), it’s just how the business of keeping disability payments in line with inflation is done.

On May 11, 2026, Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran introduced S.4487 – Veterans’ Compensation Cost-of-Living Adjustment Act of 2026. The bill would do exactly what its name implies: adjust benefits to match inflation and maintain purchasing power for veterans with service-connected disabilities.

While the legislations sounds like a new, substantial increase in compensation, it’s actually business as usual. This is how the annual COLA happens. Without such a bill (or equivalent authorization), the adjustment to disability payment might not occur or could face delays.

Also Read: Find all your veterans benefits in one place with the HonorEarned tool

The bill received wide bipartisan support, with 15 cosponsors, including seven Democrats, six Republicans, and two Independents. the bill was sent to committee for a vote before heading to the Senate or House floor.

If enacted, it would go into effect on Dec. 1, 2026, providing a cost-of-living adjustment for veterans’ benefits to keep pace with inflation, at a rate consistent with Social Security COLA increases, the same procedural step as any other COLA change. The new rate increase would affect disability compensation, clothing allowances, and dependency/indemnity compensation (DIC) for survivors.

Veterans would see the new rates in their January 2027 disability payments.

Lawmakers introduce COLA bills annually, and the exact percentage is usually set later to match the official Social Security COLA announcement.

The COLA increase for 2026 was set at the same rate as increases for Social Security recipients: 2.8%. The rate is calculated annually by the Department of Labor using the Consumer Price Index, which measures changes in the cost of consumer goods and expenses.

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Blake Stilwell

Editor-In-Chief, Air Force Veteran

Blake Stilwell is a former Air Force combat cameraman and erstwhile adventurer whose work has been featured on ABC News, HBO Sports, NBC, Military.com, Military Times, Recoil Magazine, Together We Served, the Near East Foundation, and more. He is based in Ohio, but is often found elsewhere.


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