Home / VA Claim Guides / Filing Guides
Filing Guides

VA Benefits While Abroad — Foreign Claims, FMP, Overseas C&P, International Direct Deposit

Living overseas doesn't cut you off from VA benefits. Pittsburgh handles most foreign claims, Houston handles Mexico/Central/South America/Caribbean, Manila handles the Philippines. The Foreign Medical Program covers care for your service-connected conditions, contracted local examiners do your C&P, and IDD direct-deposits your monthly comp to a foreign bank in 65 countries.

38 CFR § 17.35–17.39 (FMP); 38 CFR § 3.326 (exams); 31 CFR § 209 (Treasury direct deposit) · Free guide from VA Ready

The short version

Living overseas doesn''t change your eligibility for VA disability compensation — every claim and rating you''ve earned still counts, anywhere. What changes is the operational machinery: which office processes your claim, how you get to a C&P exam, how you receive medical care for service-connected conditions, and how the money reaches your bank.

---

Which VA office handles your claim — depends on country

VA divides foreign-claims processing geographically:

Pittsburgh Regional Office — most of the world

Houston Regional Office — Latin America and Caribbean

Manila Regional Office — Philippines

Canada — has separate VA-Veterans Affairs Canada arrangements; talk to either.

When you file via VA.gov from abroad, your claim is auto-routed based on your declared country of residence. You don''t flag it manually.

Pittsburgh also runs Benefits Delivery at Discharge (BDD) teams overseas:

These are for active-duty members within 180 days of separation, not retiree-side claims.

---

Filing the claim itself

Same forms, same standards:

One operational note: prefer electronic filing. International mail can be slow or scrutinized depending on country; VA.gov is the cleanest path.

---

Foreign Medical Program (FMP) — care for your service-connected conditions

FMP is how VA pays for medical care related to your service-connected conditions while overseas. It''s a reimbursement program, not direct-pay — you pay your foreign provider, then file for reimbursement.

Eligibility:

FMP administration:

To enroll: submit VA Form 10-7959f-1 (Foreign Medical Program Registration Form). Get the form from VA.gov or directly from the FMP office.

FMP covers:

FMP does not cover:

---

C&P exams while abroad

When the VA needs a C&P (Compensation & Pension) exam and you''re overseas, the exam is contracted to one of the VA''s current third-party contractors. As of 2025–2026 the active C&P contractors are:

Approximately 93% of all VA C&P exams are now conducted by these third-party contractors.

How it works overseas:

  1. Your RO (Pittsburgh, Houston, or Manila) orders the exam.
  2. The contractor (most often VES for international) contacts you — usually by email. Keep your VA.gov contact info current; international contractors lean on email almost exclusively.
  3. They locate a credentialed local examiner in your country.
  4. You attend the exam. Examiner submits the DBQ back to VA.
  5. VA processes the claim using DBQ findings.

Operational tips:

- VA may direct you to a U.S. military or VA facility for the exam (some travel reimbursement may be available depending on circumstance). - For some claims, VA accepts a DBQ completed by your private provider (translated to English if needed) in lieu of a contracted exam. This is at the rater''s discretion.

---

International Direct Deposit (IDD)

VA can deposit your monthly disability compensation directly into a foreign bank account in 65 supported countries. Faster, cheaper, and more reliable than international wire transfer or mailed check.

Forms (use the one your bank/country requires):

Or enroll by phone: call the VA International Direct Deposit team at (918) 781-7550 (9 a.m.–5:30 p.m. ET, Mon–Fri). At the menu, press 2 for banks outside the U.S. Email: `DIRECTD.VBAMUS@VA.GOV`.

Have ready:

How payments work:

If your country isn''t supported (sanctioned states like Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Russia under current sanctions), VA can mail a paper check or hold funds until you change residence.

---

Federal Benefits Units (FBUs) at U.S. embassies

A handful of U.S. embassies and consulates host Federal Benefits Units with VA-trained staff to help with claim filing, FMP enrollment, and IDD setup. Where they exist (Manila, Mexico City, Bangkok, Madrid, Rome, San José, and several others), they''re a useful in-person resource.

For everyone else, Overseas Military Services Coordinators (OMSCs) are reachable by email through VA''s coordinator network.

---

Documentation: the translation problem

Foreign medical records submitted as evidence generally need to be in English:

  1. Certified translation (preferred) — a professional translator with a signed certification. Strongly recommended for nexus letters and key medical evidence.
  2. Self-translation with attestation — you can translate informally and sign an attestation that the translation is accurate. VA accepts this for many routine records.

For nexus letters from foreign physicians: ask the doctor to write the letter in English when possible. If not, certified translation — nexus letters are decision-critical.

---

Things that often surprise overseas vets

---

The four-piece operational checklist

Get these set up and your VA experience overseas runs almost as smoothly as stateside:

  1. File claims via VA.gov → routes to Pittsburgh, Houston, or Manila based on your country
  2. Enroll in FMP via VA Form 10-7959f-1 → covers care for your service-connected conditions
  3. Respond to C&P scheduling emails fast when VES (or QTC/Optum/Loyal Source) reaches out
  4. Set up IDD via VA Form 24-0296A or by calling (918) 781-7550, press 2 → monthly comp to your foreign bank

That''s the playbook.

This guide is free in the VA Ready app

Free, no account: all 50+ filing guides, a personalized timeline from your separation date, an evidence checklist for every condition, and the combined-rating calculator with real VA math.

With Pro

You walk away with the documents that move claims: a VSO-ready Claim Summary PDF with a peer-reviewed evidence appendix, an Exposure Profile PDF mapping every presumptive your service earned, the actual 38 CFR rating criteria for your exact conditions, and all 50 states’ benefits.

This guide is for general informational purposes only and is not legal or medical advice. VA Ready is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Regulations and procedures change; always verify current requirements at VA.gov and consult a VA-accredited representative for help with your claim.