Hearing aids: Medicare's famous gap, the VA's quiet strength
Medicare pays nothing for hearing aids — and the VA is the largest provider of them in the country: enrolled veterans who meet the criteria get audiology exams, hearing aids, batteries, and repairs at no cost. For a benefit that runs $2,000–$7,000 a pair retail, this is the single clearest 'use your VA benefit' answer in all of Medicare.
The gap, and who fills it
Medicare: Part B covers diagnostic hearing and balance exams when a doctor orders them to evaluate a medical condition — and not one dollar of hearing aids, fitting exams, or routine hearing tests. Medicare Advantage: many plans add a hearing-aid allowance, typically a fixed amount per ear every year or two through a designated vendor — real money, rarely the whole bill. The VA: the country's largest hearing-aid purchaser, dispensing premium devices from major manufacturers through its own audiologists, with batteries, repairs, and follow-up included at no cost to qualifying veterans — and hearing loss and tinnitus happen to be the two most common service-connected conditions on the books.
Who qualifies at the VA
Hearing aids go to enrolled veterans who meet at least one of the eligibility gates — and the gates are wider than most veterans assume: any compensable service-connected disability; service-connected hearing loss or tinnitus (including 0% ratings); former POWs and Purple Heart recipients; veterans receiving Aid & Attendance or housebound benefits; and — the broad one — any enrolled veteran whose hearing loss interferes with daily life or their other medical care, as determined by the VA audiologist. In practice: enroll, get the audiology referral from your primary care team, and let the exam make the call. Tele-audiology and follow-up through the VA's remote programs cover veterans far from a clinic.
Hearing loss and tinnitus from noise exposure are classic service-connected claims — and a rating, even at 0%, converts hearing care from discretionary to entitled. A veteran buying aids retail who never filed the claim is paying twice: once at the counter, once in the unclaimed rating. A VSO files it free.
The four routes, priced honestly
| Route | Typical cost to you | The fine print |
|---|---|---|
| VA audiology | $0 — devices, batteries, repairs | Eligibility gates above; VA appointment cadence; devices from the VA's contracted (major-brand) lineup |
| MA plan allowance | Allowance minus device price — often hundreds to low thousands out of pocket | Vendor networks, allowance caps, plan-year changes; check the Evidence of Coverage, not the postcard |
| Retail prescription aids | $2,000–$7,000/pair | Medicare pays $0; an HSA can pay tax-free |
| OTC hearing aids (FDA category since 2022) | Roughly $200–$1,500/pair | For perceived mild-to-moderate loss, self-fitted — a legitimate budget lane, not a substitute for the free VA exam that rules out treatable causes |
The routing logic writes itself: VA-eligible veterans take the $0 row; the others compare an MA allowance against OTC pricing — and every veteran starts with the VA audiology exam, because a free diagnostic from the system that owns this specialty beats guessing.
If you've been quoted four figures for hearing aids, the first call isn't a vendor — it's confirming your VA eligibility. An agent can check whether your MA plan (or a better one) adds an allowance on top, free.
Connect With a Licensed AgentOr compare plans yourself at PlanMatch.com, or contact Medicare.gov / 1-800-MEDICARE.
Frequently asked questions
Does Medicare cover hearing aids in 2026?
Are VA hearing aids really free?
Which veterans qualify for VA hearing aids?
Can I use my Medicare Advantage hearing benefit and the VA?
You earned these benefits. Make them work together.
Whether you keep exactly what you have or add Medicare coverage alongside it, the right answer depends on your health, budget, and how you like to get care.
No cost, no obligation. You can also get help from Medicare.gov, 1-800-MEDICARE (TTY 1-877-486-2048), or your local SHIP office.