🏥 Veterans

The VA Is Falling Apart: What 40,000 Missing Workers Mean for You

The VA lost a net 40,000 employees in 2025 — including 1,000 doctors, 3,000 nurses, and 1,500 schedulers. 1.2 million veterans lost their VA provider. Mental health wait times hit 134 days at some clinics. Here is what happened, what it means for your care, and what you can do right now.

April 14, 2026 13:00 7 min read 4 verified sources Verified April 15, 2026 Print Flyer

The Numbers Behind the Crisis

The Department of Veterans Affairs lost a net 40,000 employees in fiscal year 2025 — the first net workforce reduction in VA history. The cuts were driven by a combination of DOGE-directed layoffs, a federal hiring freeze, and early retirement incentives that pushed experienced staff out the door. The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, in a January 2026 report titled 'Cuts, Cover-Ups, and Chaos,' documented the impact across every VA service line.

Job Category LostEstimated NumberImpact on Veterans
Doctors & Physicians1,000+Longer waits for primary care, specialty referrals delayed
Nurses & Nursing Staff3,000+Reduced inpatient capacity, mental health units understaffed
Appointment Schedulers1,500+Veterans unable to book appointments; phone lines overwhelmed
Claims Processors2,200+Disability claim backlogs growing; average wait now 6+ months
Mental Health Counselors800+Therapy session caps imposed; some clinics at 134-day wait

What This Means at Your Local VA

The Senate report documented specific, on-the-ground consequences that go beyond statistics. At one Northern California VA clinic, mental health appointment wait times reached 134 days — nearly five months. Nationally, the average wait for a mental health appointment at a VA facility hit 35 days, up from 22 days in 2024. In some regions, veterans with PTSD and other service-connected mental health conditions were told they would be capped at 8 therapy sessions per year, regardless of their medical provider's recommendation. That cap was not based on clinical evidence — it was a budget measure.

"Veterans are dying on waitlists. This is not a bureaucratic problem. This is a life-and-death emergency that the administration is hiding behind press releases about 'efficiency.'"

Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Report — 'Cuts, Cover-Ups, and Chaos' (January 2026) ↗

1.2 Million Veterans Lost Their VA Provider

When a VA doctor or nurse leaves, the veterans assigned to them don't automatically get reassigned. In many cases, they are placed on a waitlist for a new provider — a waitlist that, in some facilities, now stretches past six months. The Senate report estimated that approximately 1.2 million veterans lost their primary VA care provider in 2025 as a direct result of the workforce reductions. For veterans with complex, service-connected conditions — traumatic brain injuries, amputations, burn pit exposure — losing a provider who knows their history is not just inconvenient. It can mean starting over with a new provider who has no context for their care.

The MISSION Act Safety Valve Is Under Pressure

When the VA cannot provide timely care, veterans are legally entitled to use community (civilian) providers under the MISSION Act. But the same budget pressures that cut VA staff are also squeezing MISSION Act funding. In early 2026, VA regional offices began sending letters to veterans informing them that their community care authorizations were being reviewed and potentially reduced. Veterans who had been receiving physical therapy, mental health care, or specialty treatment from civilian providers found their authorizations cut mid-treatment — sometimes with less than two weeks' notice.

The Claims Backlog Is Growing Again

After years of progress reducing the VA disability claims backlog, the loss of 2,200+ claims processors has reversed that trend. As of early 2026, the VA's pending claims backlog had grown by more than 200,000 claims compared to the same period in 2024. The average time to process a new disability claim — already 125 days before the cuts — has grown further. For veterans filing for the first time, or for those seeking increases to existing ratings, the wait for a decision has become a financial hardship. Disability compensation is not retroactive to the date of filing in most cases; delays mean lost income.

What Veterans Can Do Right Now

  • If you lost your VA provider, call 1-800-827-1000 immediately and ask to be placed on the provider reassignment list. Do not wait for the VA to contact you.
  • If your wait time exceeds 20 days for primary care or 28 days for mental health, you are legally entitled to community care under the MISSION Act. Ask your VA facility coordinator to authorize community care.
  • If your community care authorization was cut, file a formal appeal within 30 days. Contact a VSO (Veterans Service Organization) for free help — DAV (dav.org), VFW (vfw.org), or American Legion (legion.org).
  • If you have a pending disability claim, check its status at va.gov/claim-or-appeal-status. If it has been pending more than 125 days, contact your VSO to request an expedited review.
  • Contact your U.S. Senators and Representative. The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee is actively investigating these cuts. Constituent reports of specific harms are used in Congressional oversight hearings.
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Verified Key Facts

  • 1VA lost 40,000 net employees in FY2025 — the first net workforce reduction in VA history (Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, Jan 2026)
  • 21,000+ doctors and 3,000+ nurses left the VA in 2025 — leaving 1.2 million veterans without their VA provider
  • 3Mental health wait times hit 134 days at one Northern California VA clinic; national average rose to 35 days
  • 4Some VA regions capped veterans at 8 therapy sessions per year — a budget measure, not a clinical decision
  • 52,200+ claims processors lost — disability claim backlog grew by 200,000+ claims compared to 2024
  • 6Community care (MISSION Act) authorizations being cut mid-treatment with as little as 2 weeks notice