GI Bill Benefits Explained — Which Version Is Right for You?

The GI Bill is one of the most valuable education benefits available to veterans — but navigating the different versions, eligibility requirements, and benefit structures can be confusing. There are currently two primary GI Bill programs available to most veterans: the Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) and the Montgomery GI Bill (Chapter 30). Knowing which one applies to you — and how to maximize it — can mean the difference between a fully funded education and leaving significant benefits on the table.

The Two Main GI Bill Programs

Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) — The Most Valuable Option for Most Veterans

The Post-9/11 GI Bill is the most comprehensive education benefit available and the right choice for the vast majority of veterans who qualify. It covers:

  • Tuition and fees: Paid directly to the school, up to the in-state public school maximum (or the national maximum for private schools — $28,937.09 per academic year in 2026)
  • Monthly housing allowance (BAH): Paid to you at the E-5 with dependents BAH rate for the zip code of your school — typically $1,500–$3,500/month depending on location
  • Books and supplies stipend: Up to $1,000 per academic year
  • One-time rural benefit: $500 if you’re relocating from a rural area

Eligibility: At least 90 days of aggregate active duty service after September 10, 2001, or 30 days with a service-connected disability.

Benefit tiers based on service:

  • 36+ months of service: 100% of benefits
  • 30 months: 90%
  • 24 months: 80%
  • 18 months: 70%
  • 6 months: 60%
  • 90 days: 50%

Most veterans who served a standard enlistment qualify at 100%.

Montgomery GI Bill — Active Duty (Chapter 30)

The Montgomery GI Bill Active Duty (MGIB-AD) provides a monthly payment to veterans for education and training. Unlike the Post-9/11 GI Bill, you receive a flat monthly payment that you use to pay tuition and living expenses yourself — the school doesn’t receive payment directly.

2026 monthly rates (full-time enrollment):

  • 3+ years active duty: $2,122/month
  • 2 years active duty: $1,724/month

Duration: Up to 36 months of benefits

Eligibility requirements:

  • Active duty for 2+ years after June 30, 1985
  • Had $1,200 deducted from pay during first 12 months of service (the “buy-in”)
  • Honorable discharge
  • High school diploma or GED

Post-9/11 vs Montgomery GI Bill — Which Should You Choose?

For most veterans, the Post-9/11 GI Bill is significantly more valuable. Here’s why:

Benefit Post-9/11 GI Bill Montgomery GI Bill
Tuition payment Paid directly to school (up to cap) Monthly payment to you
Housing allowance Yes — BAH equivalent No (included in monthly payment)
Books stipend Up to $1,000/year No
Private school coverage Up to $28,937/year Fixed monthly rate only
Total value (4-year degree) $80,000–$150,000+ $30,000–$45,000

The Post-9/11 GI Bill’s housing allowance alone — $2,000+/month in many markets — makes it dramatically more valuable than the Montgomery GI Bill’s fixed payment.

When MGIB might be better:

  • You’re attending school part-time while working full-time (MGIB has fewer restrictions)
  • Your school costs are very low (community college) and you don’t need the tuition coverage
  • You’re pursuing correspondence courses or non-traditional training

Important: Switching from MGIB to Post-9/11 GI Bill is allowed, but it’s a one-way switch — you cannot switch back. Make this decision carefully.

The Yellow Ribbon Program — For Private Schools and Out-of-State Tuition

The Post-9/11 GI Bill covers in-state public school tuition fully. For private schools or out-of-state public school tuition that exceeds the annual cap, the Yellow Ribbon Program can fill the gap.

Participating schools enter into agreements with the VA to fund tuition above the cap — the school covers a portion and the VA matches it dollar-for-dollar. At 100% benefit level, Yellow Ribbon participation can cover the full tuition at participating private universities — including elite schools that would otherwise be out of reach financially.

Check the VA’s Yellow Ribbon School finder at va.gov to see if your target school participates and what their contribution level is.

Transfer of Benefits to Dependents

One of the most powerful — and underused — features of the Post-9/11 GI Bill is the ability to transfer unused benefits to a spouse or dependent children.

Eligibility to transfer:

  • At least 6 years of service at the time of transfer request
  • Agree to serve 4 additional years from the transfer date (if you have less than 10 years)
  • Must transfer while still on active duty

Veterans who separate without transferring lose the ability to do so — this is one of the most common and costly missed opportunities in military benefits. If you’re still serving or recently separated, check your transfer eligibility immediately at milconnect.dmdc.osd.mil.

What GI Bill Covers — Approved Programs

GI Bill benefits can be used for a wide range of education and training:

  • 4-year colleges and universities
  • Community colleges and associate degree programs
  • Vocational and technical training
  • On-the-job training (OJT) and apprenticeships
  • Flight training
  • Correspondence courses
  • Licensing and certification exams (including Prometric, Pearson VUE)
  • National testing programs (CLEP, DSST)
  • Entrepreneurship training through approved programs

VET TEC — Technology Training for Veterans

The Veteran Employment Through Technology Education Courses (VET TEC) program is a newer benefit specifically for high-tech training programs — coding bootcamps, cybersecurity certifications, data processing, and computer programming courses.

VET TEC covers:

  • Full tuition for approved technology training providers
  • Housing allowance during training

For veterans pursuing IT careers — a natural fit given military technical training backgrounds — VET TEC is worth serious consideration alongside traditional degree programs.

How to Apply for GI Bill Benefits

  1. Determine which GI Bill chapter you’re eligible for
  2. Apply online at va.gov/education/apply-for-education-benefits
  3. Submit VA Form 22-1990 (new application) or 22-1995 (change of program/school)
  4. Receive your Certificate of Eligibility (COE)
  5. Provide the COE to your school’s VA certifying official
  6. Certifying official enrolls you with the VA each semester
  7. Benefits begin — tuition paid to school, housing allowance paid to you

The Bottom Line

The GI Bill is one of the most valuable benefits of military service — providing $80,000–$150,000+ in education value for veterans who qualify for full Post-9/11 benefits. Choose the Post-9/11 GI Bill unless you have a specific reason to use the Montgomery GI Bill, maximize your benefit through the Yellow Ribbon Program at private schools, and if you’re still serving, transfer unused benefits to your dependents before you separate.

You earned this through your service. Use every dollar of it.

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