U.S. Air Force veterans include aviators, maintainers, intelligence specialists, security forces, and dozens of other specialties. Air Force service creates specific occupational exposure risks — jet fuel (JP-8, JP-4) and related hydrocarbons, radar radiation, burn pits on deployed bases, hearing loss from jet noise, and PTSD from combat air operations and remotely piloted aircraft (RPA/drone) operations. The PACT Act expanded burn pit presumptives benefit a large portion of post-9/11 Air Force veterans.
⚡ Quick Eligibility Calculator — Air Force Veterans
| Service Type | Minimum Requirement | Unlocks |
|---|---|---|
| Active Duty (Wartime) | 1 day of wartime service qualifies for expanded VA Pension consideration | VA Disability, Healthcare, GI Bill, VA Pension eligibility |
| Active Duty (Peacetime) | 181 continuous days for peacetime VA healthcare eligibility | VA Disability, Healthcare, Home Loan, GI Bill |
| Reserve / Guard | 6 years Air Force Reserve or Air National Guard with honorable discharge, or 90 days federal activation | VA Disability (service-connected), Home Loan, GI Bill (if federally activated) |
| General Minimum | 90 days active duty for basic VA benefits; 24 months for full GI Bill | Basic VA benefit eligibility (VA Healthcare, Disability Comp) |
Honorable or General Under Honorable discharge required for most benefits. Other-Than-Honorable (OTH) evaluated case-by-case.
Air Force-Specific Benefits and Programs
Benefits Unique to Air Force Veterans
- Air Force Aid Society (AFAS) — emergency financial assistance for Air Force veterans and families
- PACT Act burn pit presumptives — direct benefit for post-9/11 Airmen deployed to Southwest Asia
- RPA/drone operator PTSD recognition — specific clinical guidance for remotely piloted aircraft operators
- Jet fuel (JP-8) exposure claims — peripheral neuropathy, kidney disease, cancer links under research
- Air Force Sergeant's Association (AFSA) — advocacy and member benefits
- Thunderbird Foundation — support for Air Force and Space Force families
California-Specific Benefits for Air Force Veterans
California State Veterans Programs
- CalVet Home Loans — below-market interest rates for veteran homebuyers
- College fee waiver for dependents of 100% service-connected veterans
- California Department of Rehabilitation (DOR) — supplemental vocational rehab
- Veterans Employment Committee (VEC) — state job preference
Property Tax Exemption in California
California's Disabled Veterans' Property Tax Exemption provides a basic exemption of $161,083 in home value (2026), rising to $241,627 for veterans whose household income falls below $72,335. The 100% disabled veteran exemption covers a larger portion of home value.
VA Healthcare Facilities in California
California has six major VA Medical Centers: San Francisco, Palo Alto, Martinez, Los Angeles, San Diego, and Long Beach, plus over 40 community-based outpatient clinics.
Filing Information for California Air Force Veterans
Apply for the California Disabled Veterans' Exemption with your county assessor by February 15 (or April 1 in some counties). CalVet county offices assist with VA claims statewide.
State veterans office: California Department of Veterans Affairs (CalVet) →
Key Organizations for Air Force Veterans in California
Air Force Aid Society (AFAS) →
Emergency financial assistance for Air Force veterans and families
Air Force Sergeant's Association (AFSA) →
Advocacy and member benefits for enlisted Airmen and veterans
DAV →
Free VA claims assistance nationwide
American Legion →
Largest VSO with free accredited claims assistance
Securely Store Your Records in the Benefit Bunker
Benefit Bunker is a Progressive Web App (PWA) — install it on your phone or computer for offline access. Store your DD-214, rating decision letters, and VA correspondence directly in your Bunker. Available at your VA appointment even without Wi-Fi.
Add to Home Screen — Free, No Account →Frequently Asked Questions
What burn pit benefits are available for Air Force veterans in California?
The PACT Act (2022) established presumptive service connection for over 20 conditions linked to burn pit and airborne hazard exposure for veterans who served in Southwest Asia after August 2, 1990, or in Afghanistan, Syria, or other specific areas after September 11, 2001. Air Force veterans in California who were deployed to forward operating bases where burn pits were used can file claims for respiratory conditions, certain cancers, and other PACT Act presumptive conditions without separately proving exposure. The VA now screens all enrolled veterans for toxic exposures at every VA appointment.
Can Air Force veterans in California file claims for jet fuel exposure?
Research continues to emerge linking chronic jet fuel exposure (particularly JP-8) to peripheral neuropathy, kidney damage, and certain cancers. While not yet on the VA's presumptive list, Air Force aircraft maintainers, fuels specialists, and others with documented occupational fuel exposure in California and elsewhere can file disability claims on a direct service connection basis with supporting medical literature and nexus letters. A VA-accredited attorney or VSO in California can help develop the evidence for non-presumptive occupational exposure claims.
Do Air Force retirees in California receive the same VA benefits as other veterans?
Yes — Air Force retirees in California receive the same VA disability benefits as other veterans. Retired Air Force members (20+ years of active service) receiving military retirement pay must be aware of the Concurrent Retirement and Disability Pay (CRDP) rules: veterans rated 50%+ can receive both full military retirement and VA disability compensation simultaneously. Veterans rated below 50% may be subject to retired pay offset (dollar-for-dollar reduction), though Combat-Related Special Compensation (CRSC) may be a better alternative for combat-related disabilities.