VA wartime pensions provide monthly income support for low-income wartime veterans (and surviving spouses) — including Aid & Attendance and Housebound supplements that boost monthly payments substantially for eligible Greensboro-area beneficiaries. Most Greensboro families don’t realize the full pension package: a married A&A veteran can receive up to $2,800/month in 2026.
The three wartime pension tiers in Greensboro
Three tiers, from least to greatest benefit:
- Basic Pension: for low-income wartime veterans aged 65+ or permanently and totally disabled. 2026 max: ~$1,650/month married, ~$1,260/month single.
- Housebound: for veterans substantially confined to their home due to permanent disability. ~$2,070/month married, ~$1,540/month single.
- Aid & Attendance: for veterans needing help with ADLs. Up to $2,800/month married, $2,300/month single. Maximum benefit, most paperwork.
Eligibility for Greensboro veterans
All three pension tiers share core eligibility:
- 90+ days active duty, with 1+ day during wartime era (WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Gulf War, post-9/11)
- Honorable discharge
- Income/asset limits (the highest threshold; varies by tier and dependent count)
- Age 65+ or permanently and totally disabled
The tiers add clinical-need tests (Housebound: confined to home; A&A: needs daily-living help).
Surviving spouse benefits in Greensboro
Surviving spouses of wartime veterans qualify for separate pension tiers:
- Survivor Basic Pension: ~$1,065/month in 2026
- Housebound Survivor: ~$1,300/month
- Survivor with Aid & Attendance: ~$1,500/month
Many Greensboro surviving spouses qualify and never apply — these benefits can be life-changing for elderly widows of veterans.
How Greensboro veterans apply
Three filing options:
- Online via VA.gov
- Mail to VA Pension Management Center
- Through a VA-accredited claims agent, county Veterans Service Officer, or VSO (American Legion, VFW, DAV)
All are free for original A&A claims. Greensboro-area CVSOs (paid by North Carolina) are particularly helpful for older veterans new to the VA system.
How Greensboro pensions affect Medicaid
VA pension income is counted for Medicaid eligibility in most states — which can push some veterans over income thresholds. However, the medical expense deduction usually preserves Medicaid eligibility when in-home care costs are documented. Some states’ Medicaid waiver programs specifically count A&A income differently. A geriatric care manager familiar with both systems is worth the consultation fee for complex Greensboro cases.
A free 15-minute call with a VA-accredited claims agent can determine which pension tier your Greensboro-area veteran qualifies for — and which paperwork to gather. Talk to a VeteransHomeCare advisor when you’re ready.



