Finding help in Nevada
Federal VA disability, healthcare, education, housing, and survivor benefits are the same in every state. What changes by state — and, more specifically, by county — is access to free, accredited representation. Most veterans in Nevada can work with a County Veterans Service Officer (CVSO) at no cost, or with a VSO recognized by the Department of Veterans Affairs.
- VA’s accredited representative lookup. The VA publishes the official directory of accredited attorneys, claims agents, and VSO representatives. You can filter by state when you search: VA Office of General Counsel accreditation search.
- County CVSOs. Many Nevadacounties staff a County Veterans Service Officer. CVSOs are funded by the county (or state) and may file federal and state veteran claims for free. They are not VBN and are not employees of the VA — they work for the veterans of their county.
- Your state’s department of veterans affairs. Search for “NevadaDepartment of Veterans Affairs” on the official state government website (.gov) for state-specific benefits, nursing-home admissions, tuition programs, and the current CVSO directory. VBN links to the Nevada Department of Veterans Services; confirm URLs before submitting forms.
Start with your state veterans office
The Nevada Department of Veterans Services is the authoritative source for state-level eligibility, application forms, and appeal procedures. Many Nevada counties also host a County Veterans Service Officer (CVSO); state VA departments typically maintain a directory of CVSOs who can file state and federal claims at no cost. The current directory is available at veterans.nv.gov/benefits/veterans-service-officers.
Commonly cited Nevada benefits
These are benefits most frequently highlighted by Nevada Department of Veterans Services. Eligibility rules vary by program and change over time; each item links to the official source.
- Disabled Veteran Property Tax Exemption. Nevada offers a tiered property or vehicle-registration tax exemption for veterans with a service-connected disability of 60% or higher, scaling with disability rating. Surviving spouses of eligible veterans may continue the exemption. Source.
- No State Income Tax. Nevada has no state income tax. VA disability compensation is already federally tax-exempt; this state posture means no additional layer of tax applies to compensation or military retirement income. Source.
- Nevada Veterans Home Program. Nevada operates veterans homes in Boulder City and Sparks offering skilled nursing and memory care to eligible veterans and dependents. Admission is based on availability and combined VA and state eligibility rules. Source.
- Veteran Designation on Nevada Driver License. Nevada driver licenses and state ID cards may display a "VETERAN" designation at no additional fee with DD-214 verification through the Nevada DMV. Source.
Federal claims still run through VA.gov
State benefits are administered by Nevada. Federal VA disability compensation, healthcare enrollment, GI Bill, VR&E, VA home loans, and survivor benefits are administered by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and are the same in every state. VBN’s federal-side tools are linked below.
What this page is (and what it isn’t)
This page summarizes publicly published NV state veteran benefits with links to authoritative sources. It is not a legal guide and does not substitute for an accredited Veterans Service Officer. Filing deadlines, income thresholds, and rating thresholds change; treat this page as a starting point and confirm current rules with the state VA department before making filing decisions.