How to Use Your GI Bill Benefits: Post-9/11 vs Montgomery GI Bill Explained
Two GI Bills, One Decision
Most veterans eligible for GI Bill education benefits have access to two programs: the Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) and the Montgomery GI Bill (MGIB, Chapter 30). Choosing the right one — or understanding how to maximize what you have — can mean tens of thousands of dollars in education funding. This guide breaks down both programs, who qualifies, what they cover, and how to apply.
The Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33)
The Post-9/11 GI Bill is the most comprehensive education benefit available to veterans today. For those who qualify at the 100% benefit level, it covers:
- Tuition and fees: Paid directly to the school up to the in-state public school rate (or the national cap for private schools, currently $28,937.09 per academic year).
- Monthly housing allowance (MHA): Based on the Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) for an E-5 with dependents at the zip code of your school. For 2026, this averages $1,500–$2,500/month depending on location — paid to you, not the school.
- Books and supplies stipend: Up to $1,000 per academic year paid directly to you.
- One-time rural benefit: $500 payment if you live in a county with six or fewer people per square mile and must relocate for school.
Eligibility for Post-9/11 GI Bill
You must have served at least 90 aggregate days on active duty after September 10, 2001, or been discharged with a service-connected disability after 30 days. The benefit level scales from 40% (90 days of service) to 100% (36 or more months of service).
The Housing Allowance Detail That Surprises Veterans
The MHA is only paid for months you are enrolled at least half-time. If you are enrolled less than half-time, you receive no MHA. Online-only students receive a flat national rate (approximately $1,003/month in 2026) rather than the local BAH rate — a significant difference if you were planning to study remotely.
The Montgomery GI Bill (Chapter 30)
The Montgomery GI Bill is the older program. It pays a flat monthly rate directly to the student rather than covering tuition directly. For 2026, the full-time rate is approximately $2,324/month for veterans who served three or more years on active duty.
MGIB typically makes sense when:
- Your school charges tuition below what the Post-9/11 GI Bill covers, making the flat cash payment more valuable.
- You are attending a non-VA-approved flight school or training program covered under MGIB but not Chapter 33.
- You contributed $1,200 to MGIB during service and want to use those contributions.
In most cases, the Post-9/11 GI Bill provides greater total value — particularly if you attend a school in a high cost-of-living area where the MHA alone exceeds the MGIB monthly rate.
Can You Transfer GI Bill Benefits to Dependents?
Yes — the Post-9/11 GI Bill allows active duty service members (not veterans) to transfer unused months to a spouse or dependent children, subject to additional service obligations. The transfer must be approved while still on active duty. Once separated, you cannot initiate a new transfer.
If you are already out of the military and your benefits were not transferred before separation, they remain yours to use — they cannot be transferred after the fact.
What Schools and Programs Qualify?
Both GI Bills cover a wide range of approved programs:
- 4-year colleges and universities
- Community colleges and vocational schools
- Graduate and professional programs
- Apprenticeships and on-the-job training (OJT)
- Flight training (with specific eligibility rules)
- Correspondence courses
- Licensing and certification tests
- National testing programs (CLEP, SAT, etc.)
Verify that your specific school and program are VA-approved before enrolling. Search the GI Bill Comparison Tool at va.gov/gi-bill-comparison-tool to see approved schools, estimated benefits, and school performance data.
How to Apply for GI Bill Benefits
- Go to va.gov and apply online using VA Form 22-1990 (new application) or VA Form 22-1995 (change of program or place of training).
- The VA will send you a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) — bring this to your school’s veterans certifying official.
- Your school’s certifying official enrolls you with the VA each semester, triggering your benefit payments.
- The VA pays tuition directly to the school and deposits MHA and book stipends into your bank account.
Processing times vary — apply at least 30–60 days before your semester begins to avoid gaps in payment.
Fry Scholarship: For Survivors and Dependents
The Marine Gunnery Sergeant John David Fry Scholarship provides Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits to children and surviving spouses of service members who died in the line of duty after September 10, 2001. Eligible dependents receive the full Chapter 33 benefit — tuition, MHA, and book stipend — for up to 36 months.
Bottom Line
For most veterans, the Post-9/11 GI Bill is the stronger program — full tuition coverage, a substantial monthly housing allowance, and a book stipend add up to significant real value. Apply early, verify your school is VA-approved, and make sure your school’s certifying official knows you are using VA benefits each semester. If you have months remaining, use them — your GI Bill entitlement does not expire for Post-9/11 benefits used after January 1, 2013.