Stop The VA From Forcing Vets Into Debt To Cover Its Own Mistakes

471 signatures toward our 30,000 goal

1.57% Complete

Sponsor: The Veterans Site

The same agency meant to serve veterans is driving them into debt over errors they didn’t cause, while rewarding its own executives with millions. Take a stand for our veterans!

Stop The VA From Forcing Vets Into Debt To Cover Its Own Mistakes

The Department of Veterans Affairs has a responsibility to care for those who served. Instead, it's failing them—by overpaying benefits due to internal errors, then clawing back the money years later.

In fiscal year 2024 alone, the VA overpaid nearly $1.4 billion in benefits1. Many of these errors weren’t the fault of veterans. They were the result of delayed processing, outdated systems, or missed updates inside the agency. But the VA still sends collection notices, sometimes years after the fact.

Veterans Paying the Price for Government Mistakes

One 94-year-old veteran reported his wife’s death to the VA in 2011. Seven years later, he received a bill for overpayments the agency failed to correct in time2. Another veteran told the VA about his divorce, only to be charged $18,000 a decade later when the paperwork was “lost”2. These are not isolated mistakes. They’re part of a broken system.

Executives Got Millions in Bonuses While Veterans Fell Into Debt

At the same time, the VA improperly awarded over $10.8 million in bonuses to executives who weren’t eligible3. While veterans are being pushed into debt over errors they didn’t cause, senior officials were receiving payouts with little justification or oversight.

Appeals Process Is Confusing and Time-Sensitive

When veterans do receive debt notices, the process is confusing. The letters are often unclear, leaving many unaware of their options or rights2. Though veterans can request waivers, hearings, or repayment plans, these require quick responses and are often difficult to navigate without legal help4.

The VA Knows Its System Is Failing—And So Does Congress

Congressional oversight has confirmed what veterans have long known: claims processors are undertrained and overwhelmed5. A single mistake can result in years of financial fallout for someone living on fixed income. Delays, miscommunications, and missing documents continue to trap veterans in cycles of debt, confusion, and stress.

Take Action to Protect Those Who Served

We cannot continue to punish those who served for the VA’s internal failings. It is time for action—real oversight, better training, and compassion built into every decision.

The VA must fix its systems, simplify communications, and put an end to the cycle of surprise debt. Veterans should not be forced to repay money they never should have received in the first place.

Stand with veterans. Add your name now to demand reform from the Department of Veterans Affairs.

More on this issue:

  1. Melissa Chan, NBC News (14 May 2025), "Congress pushes VA to explain why it regularly overpays veterans and then asks for the money back."
  2. Abbie Bennett, Connecting Vets (19 Sep 2019), "A 94-year-old veteran told VA his wife died. 7 years later, VA came to collect a debt."
  3. Jory Heckman, Federal News Network (10 May 2024), "VA paid nearly $11M in bonuses to ineligible executives, watchdog finds."
  4. Anne Linscott, Hill & Ponton (11 Mar 2016), "The VA Says They Overpaid Me, What Does That Overpayment Mean?."
  5. Linda F. Hersey, The American Legion (May 2025), "Some veterans accruing debt from overpayments in VA benefits."

The Petition

To the Secretary of Veterans Affairs,

We, the undersigned, respectfully call on your office to implement stronger oversight and immediate reforms within the Department of Veterans Affairs to prevent underpayments and to eliminate the unjust financial burden placed on veterans through mishandled overpayments.

Every year, thousands of veterans receive overpayment notices from the VA—often years after the agency’s own clerical or administrative errors. Many are blindsided, some are elderly or disabled, and nearly all are left to face debts they never knew they had. At the same time, systemic failures have led to critical underpayments that deny veterans the full benefits they rightfully earned.

This is not just a matter of dollars—it’s a matter of dignity. These men and women served our country with honor. They should never have to live in fear of confusing letters, sudden debt collection, or having their benefits slashed because of government mistakes.

We urge the VA to:

  • Strengthen training and accountability for claims processing staff.
  • Improve transparency and communication around benefit changes and payment errors.
  • Ensure all debt notices are understandable, timely, and accompanied by real options for appeal or forgiveness.
  • Halt benefit withholdings until a thorough and fair review is completed.
  • Establish a compassionate standard for debt forgiveness when VA errors are to blame.

Above all, we ask that the VA lead with compassion and humanity. Veterans should be treated as heroes—not as liabilities.

These reforms will restore trust in the VA, protect those who’ve already given so much, and ensure a better future for all veterans and their families.

Sincerely,