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VA Healthcare

2026 VA copay rates — and who never pays them

In 2026, veterans in priority groups 7–8 pay $15 for a VA primary care visit, $50 for specialty care, $30 for urgent care, and up to $1,736 plus $10 a day for the first 90 days of an inpatient stay. Medications run $5/$8/$11 per 30-day supply by tier with a $700 annual cap — and veterans rated 10% or more service-connected, plus all of Priority Group 1, are exempt from most or all of it.

First: who's exempt

Many veterans never see a VA copay. You generally won't pay copays if you have a service-connected rating of 10% or higher (for care), you're in Priority Group 1, you're a former POW or Medal of Honor recipient, you're catastrophically disabled, your income falls below VA limits, or the care itself is service-connected, preventive (flu shots, screenings), or related to a special authority such as PACT Act toxic exposure. Everything below applies mainly to priority groups 7 and 8 receiving care for non-service-connected conditions.

Outpatient visit copays — 2026

Visit typeCopay
Primary care visit or test$15
Specialty care visit (cardiology, audiology, optometry, surgical consults, and so on)$50
Preventive screenings, immunizations, lab work bundled with a visit$0

Urgent care — the three-visit rule

VA-network urgent care (in the community, for minor illness and injury) has its own schedule, and a flu-shot-only visit is always free:

Priority groupFirst 3 visits each calendar yearEach additional visit
1–5$0$30
6$0 if related to a special-authority condition; otherwise $30$30
7–8$30$30

Inpatient copays — 2026

The full inpatient rate tracks the Medicare Part A deductible. Veterans in Priority Group 7 (and some others below the geographic income threshold) qualify for a reduced rate of 20%:

Length of stayFull rate (PG 8)Reduced rate (PG 7)
First 90 days in a 365-day period$1,736 + $10/day$347.20 + $2/day
Each additional 90 days$868 + $10/day$173.60 + $2/day

Medication copays — 2026

Copays apply per supply of medication for non-service-connected conditions, for veterans in priority groups 2–8 unless otherwise exempt:

Tier30-day60-day90-day
Tier 0 — no-copay prescription & OTC medicines$0$0$0
Tier 1 — preferred generics$5$10$15
Tier 2 — non-preferred generics & some OTC$8$16$24
Tier 3 — brand-name medicines$11$22$33

The annual medication copay cap is $700 per calendar year. Full details on the VA prescriptions guide.

Long-term care

Geriatric and extended care is copay-free for the first 21 days in any 12-month period. From day 22, copays vary by level of care and your financial assessment — the VA's copay rates page has the current schedule.

How Medicare changes the math

VA copays only apply at the VA. If you also have Medicare, care outside the VA follows Medicare's cost-sharing instead — the 2026 Part B deductible is $283 with 20% coinsurance, and Medicare Advantage plans set their own copays under a $9,250 in-network out-of-pocket cap. For PG 7–8 veterans, comparing a $50 VA specialty copay against an MA plan's specialist copay is a real, line-item decision. How veterans weigh the pairing.

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Frequently asked questions

Do veterans with a disability rating pay VA copays?
Veterans rated 10% or higher pay no copays for care. Medication copays for non-service-connected conditions can still apply at 10–40% ratings, while Priority Group 1 (50%+ or unemployable) pays nothing at all.
Is there a cap on VA copays?
Medications are capped at $700 per calendar year for priority groups 2–8. Inpatient copays reset on a 365-day cycle. There's no single all-services out-of-pocket cap like Medicare Advantage's MOOP.
Does the VA charge for emergency room visits?
VA emergency departments follow the same copay rules as other VA care for your group. Non-VA emergency rooms are a different story entirely — see the emergency care guide.
Why did my VA inpatient copay change for 2026?
The full inpatient rate is pegged to the Medicare Part A deductible, which rose to $1,736 for 2026, so the VA rate moved with it.

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