- VeteransReduces out-of-pocket transportation costs for disabled veterans receiving adapted vehicles.
- VeteransImproves mobility and independence by ensuring delivery to veterans' homes.
- Targeted stakeholdersSimplifies purchasing by rolling shipping into the VA-covered purchase price.
Deliver for Veterans Act of 2025
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
This bill amends 38 U.S.C. §3902 to authorize the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to pay costs associated with delivery of automobiles or other conveyances adapted for operation by a disabled individual to eligible persons.
The amendment adds statutory language regarding delivery/shipping and the purchase price of such automobiles or conveyances.
The text provided is brief and focuses on expanding VA authority to cover delivery-related costs.
Content is narrow and non-ideological so likelihood is above minimal, but fiscal implications, scoring, and legislative calendar reduce near-term chances.
Relative to its intended legislative type (a narrow substantive amendment expanding VA payment authority), the bill clearly states its purpose and properly targets an existing statutory provision but provides minimal operational detail. The core mechanism is under-specified and the amendment text as presented is syntactically unclear in places. Key elements such as funding, procedural implementation, edge-case handling, and accountability are largely absent.
Disagreement over fiscal cost and whether federal funding is appropriate
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Targeted stakeholdersIncreases VA program costs, potentially requiring additional appropriations.
- Targeted stakeholdersCreates additional administrative burden to verify, process, and audit shipping charges.
- Targeted stakeholdersCould incentivize higher vendor shipping invoices to capture reimbursable payments.
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Disagreement over fiscal cost and whether federal funding is appropriate
Likely supportive.
Views the change as reducing out-of-pocket barriers for disabled veterans and promoting equitable access to mobility.
Will want it implemented promptly and inclusively.
Generally favorable but cautious.
Sees practical value in covering delivery costs while wanting clear fiscal controls, program guidelines, and anti-fraud measures.
Prefers measured implementation and oversight.
Skeptical.
Sees this as an expansion of VA entitlement with unclear cost controls.
Prefers limited scope, verification, or state-level solutions rather than broad federal spending increases.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Content is narrow and non-ideological so likelihood is above minimal, but fiscal implications, scoring, and legislative calendar reduce near-term chances.
- Exact textual ambiguity between 'shipping' and 'purchase price'
- No cost estimate or CBO score included
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Disagreement over fiscal cost and whether federal funding is appropriate
Content is narrow and non-ideological so likelihood is above minimal, but fiscal implications, scoring, and legislative calendar reduce nea…
Relative to its intended legislative type (a narrow substantive amendment expanding VA payment authority), the bill clearly states its purpose and properly targets an existing statutory provision but provides minimal op…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.