The original
Servicemen's Readjustment Act, passed by the
United States Congress in 1944, extended a wide variety of benefits to eligible veterans. The VA
loan guarantee program was especially important to veterans. Under the law, as amended, the VA is authorized to guarantee or insure home, farm, and business loans made to veterans by lending institutions. As of 2020, over 25 million VA home loans have been insured by the government. The VA can make direct loans in certain areas for the purpose of purchasing or constructing a home or farm residence, or for repair, alteration, or improvement of the dwelling. The terms and requirements of VA farm and business loans have not induced private lenders to make such loans in volume during recent years. The Veterans Housing Act of 1970 removed all termination dates for applying for VA-guaranteed housing loans. This 1970 amendment also provided for VA-guaranteed loans on mobile homes. More recently, the
Veterans Housing Benefits Improvement Act of 1978 expanded and increased the housing benefits for millions of American veterans.), program eligibility was expanded to include
Reservists and
National Guard personnel who served honorably for at least six years without otherwise qualifying under the previous active duty provisions. Such personnel are required to pay a slightly higher funding fee when obtaining a VA home loan. Despite a great deal of confusion and misunderstanding, the federal government generally does not make direct loans under the act. The government simply guarantees loans made by ordinary mortgage lenders (descriptions of which appear in subsequent sections) after veterans make their own arrangements for the loans through normal financial circles. The Veterans Administration then appraises the property in question and, if satisfied with the risk involved, guarantees the lender against loss of principal if the buyer defaults. In association with the VA's program, the
Servicemembers' Civil Relief Act protects service members from financial woes on their home loan that may occur as a result of active duty commitments, freezing their interest rates at 6%. On October 26, 2012, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced it has guaranteed 20 million home loans since its home loan program was established in 1944 as part of the original GI Bill of Rights for returning
World War II Veterans. The 20 millionth loan was guaranteed for a home in
Woodbridge, Va., purchased by the surviving spouse of an
Iraq War Veteran who died in 2010. On June 22, 2019, the VA loan program celebrated its 75th anniversary since the passing of the original Servicemen's Readjustment Act, also known as the
G.I. Bill. During the celebration, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced the program had guaranteed 24 million VA home loans since its inception. On June 25, 2019, the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act of 2019 was signed into law temporarily increasing the VA funding fee for active duty service members and veterans starting January 1, 2020. The law removed VA county loan limits for homebuyers with full VA loan entitlement and made
Purple Heart recipients exempt from paying the VA funding fee. Several members of Congress were displeased after the passing of the act, writing an open letter to
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy asking that future bills not be paid for by increasing VA loan fees. In June 2023, the
House Armed Services Committee approved the Major Richard Star Act which would allow veterans who receive medical retirement before 20 years of service to receive both full military retirement pay and disability pay. The bill has broad bipartisan support but in order to become law, it requires full offsetting for its
Congressional Budge Office estimated cost of $9.75 billion over the next ten years. On November 11, 2023,
NPR published an investigation into thousands of veterans who lost income and took a
COVID forbearance on their mortgage payments for six or twelve months, who then became at risk of losing their homes when the VA in October 2022 ended the Partial Claim Payment program, an affordable way to start paying their mortgages again. Approximately 6,000 VA loan holders who took COVID forbearances were in the foreclosure process and 34,000 were delinquent. On November 15, US Senators
Sherrod Brown,
Jon Tester,
Jack Reed, and
Tim Kaine wrote an open letter to the VA to immediately pause the foreclosure process on all VA loans where borrowers would likely qualify for the VA’s new Veterans Assistance Servicing Purchase (VASP) program. On November 17, the VA subsequently halted VA loan foreclosures for six months. ==Funding fees==