Tricare and VA Benefits for In-Home Care: Differences Explained

Tricare is for active military and retirees; VA is for separated veterans. Each covers different parts of in-home care — here's how they fit together.

Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders

3 min read

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Updated May 13, 2026

A senior service member at home — typical client for VA Aid & Attendance home-care benefits.

Tricare is the U.S. military’s health-insurance program for active-duty servicemembers, military families, and military retirees. The VA is a separate system covering veterans who have separated from active duty. Tricare covers limited skilled home health (similar to Medicare); VA home-care programs are far more comprehensive for ongoing daily support. Many military retirees qualify for both systems and use them in combination.

This guide explains what each program covers for in-home care, who qualifies, and how to use them together without coverage gaps. For the broader VA picture, see our pillar guide on veterans home care and the program breakdown in VA benefits that pay for home care.

What does Tricare cover for in-home care?

Tricare’s coverage of in-home care is narrow:

  • Skilled home health. RN visits, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy when ordered by a physician for a specific medical condition. Coverage is similar to Medicare’s home health benefit.
  • Hospice care. Comprehensive in-home hospice for terminally ill beneficiaries.
  • Durable medical equipment. Hospital beds, wheelchairs, oxygen, and other in-home medical equipment.
  • Some custodial care under the Extended Care Health Option (ECHO) for active-duty family members with qualifying special needs.

Tricare does NOT cover:

  • Long-term non-medical home care (companion care, personal care for ADLs)
  • Live-in or 24/7 home care
  • Adult day care
  • Memory care services not tied to a specific medical episode

What does the VA cover that Tricare doesn’t?

The VA’s home care programs fill the gaps Tricare leaves open:

  • Aid & Attendance — cash benefit (up to $2,800/mo in 2026) for ongoing non-medical daily-living help. Tricare won’t pay this.
  • Homemaker / Home Health Aide program — long-term non-medical in-home care. Tricare won’t pay this.
  • Veteran-Directed Care — flexible budget that can pay family-member caregivers. Tricare has no equivalent.
  • GEC respite — short-term breaks for family caregivers. Tricare doesn’t fund this.

For most retired military members aging in place, the VA’s programs do far more work than Tricare on the home-care side.

How to use Tricare and VA benefits together

Most retired military members aging at home use a layered approach:

  1. Tricare covers any skilled home health (post-hospital recovery, wound care, therapy) and durable medical equipment.
  2. VA Aid & Attendance or H/HHA covers the ongoing companion or personal care between medical episodes.
  3. Medicare (for those over 65) layers on additional skilled home-health coverage.
  4. Tricare for Life serves as wraparound coverage for Medicare beneficiaries.

The coordination is mostly administrative — your in-home care agency and VA caseworker handle the billing and approvals. Your job is to make sure each system knows about the others.

Who qualifies for Tricare versus VA?

Tricare covers:

  • Active-duty servicemembers and their families
  • National Guard and Reserve members and their families (when activated)
  • Military retirees and their families
  • Medal of Honor recipients and their families
  • Survivors of deceased military members

VA covers:

  • Veterans who served on active duty and were not dishonorably discharged
  • Surviving spouses of qualifying veterans
  • Some dependents under specific programs (CHAMPVA, fry scholarship, etc.)

A military retiree who is also a veteran qualifies for both systems and uses them in parallel.

What about active-duty family members aging at home?

Active-duty family members (typically a servicemember’s elderly parent) generally aren’t covered by Tricare for long-term home care — Tricare is for the servicemember and their immediate family. If the elderly parent is themselves a veteran, VA programs apply. Otherwise, the family relies on Medicare, Medicaid, long-term care insurance, or private pay.

What’s the next step?

A free 15-minute call with a VA-accredited care advisor will map the right combination of Tricare, VA, and Medicare benefits for your specific situation. Talk to a VeteransHomeCare advisor when you’re ready.

Frequently asked questions

Does Tricare for Life cover in-home care?

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Tricare for Life acts as secondary coverage to Medicare for military retirees over 65. It picks up the 20 percent that Medicare doesn't cover for skilled home health and durable medical equipment — but it doesn't extend coverage to non-medical companion or personal care. For long-term in-home support, military retirees rely on VA programs, long-term care insurance, or private pay rather than Tricare for Life.

Can my veteran parent use both Tricare and VA at the same time?

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Yes, if your parent is a military retiree (which qualifies them for Tricare) and a veteran (which qualifies them for VA programs). The two systems coordinate at the billing level — Tricare covers Tricare-eligible services, the VA covers VA-eligible services, and the home-care agency or VA caseworker handles the paperwork. The veteran benefits from broader coverage than either system provides alone.

What's CHAMPVA, and how does it relate?

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CHAMPVA (Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Department of Veterans Affairs) covers spouses and dependent children of veterans with 100-percent service-connected disabilities, and survivors of veterans who died of service-connected conditions. It's separate from Tricare. For in-home care, CHAMPVA generally covers skilled home health similar to Medicare — not long-term non-medical care.

If a veteran has Medicare and VA benefits, which is primary?

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For VA-eligible services (H/HHA, Aid & Attendance, VDC, GEC), the VA is primary. For Medicare-eligible services (skilled home health, hospital, doctor visits), Medicare is primary. The two systems generally don't overlap — they cover different services. A veteran with both can use VA programs for long-term home care and Medicare for short-term medical recovery without coordination complexity.

Can active-duty servicemembers' aging parents get VA-paid home care?

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Only if the aging parent is themselves a veteran. The VA serves veterans and their qualifying dependents — not non-veteran parents of servicemembers. If the parent is a veteran, full VA programs apply (Aid & Attendance, H/HHA, VDC). If the parent isn't a veteran, the family relies on Medicare, Medicaid, long-term care insurance, or private pay regardless of the adult child's military service.

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About the author

James Carter, MSW, Accredited VA Claims Agent

Senior Veterans Care Advisor

James is a U.S. Army veteran and a licensed Master of Social Work who has spent 12 years helping wartime veterans and their spouses navigate VA benefits, Aid & Attendance applications, and the transition into in-home care. He writes about the practical mechanics of veteran-specific home care — what the VA pays for, what it doesn't, and how to get a claim approved on the first try.

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