VA Achieves Seven-Year High in Housing Homeless Veterans, Including 898 in Eastern Colorado


Description: The Department of Veterans Affairs permanently housed 51,936 homeless Veterans in FY 2025 — the highest number in seven years — including 898 Veterans in Eastern Colorado. Learn how new initiatives like “Getting Veterans Off the Street” are driving historic progress.

VA houses largest number of homeless Veterans in seven years

VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System helped house 898 Veterans locally

WASHINGTON — The Department of Veterans Affairs announced that it permanently housed 51,936 homeless veterans across the country in fiscal year 2025.

That number is 4,011 more veterans than VA housed last year.

The nationwide numbers include 898 veterans permanently housed by the VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System (ECHCS).

This is VA’s best national performance since it began tracking the number of individual veterans permanently housed instead of the total number of permanent housing placements, ensuring a more accurate count of the number of veterans helped.

VA began using this new methodology in 2022, and when applied retroactively to 2019, the numbers look like this:

FY

Permanent Housing Placements

Unique Veterans Housed

FY 2025

53,839

51,936

FY 2024

51,124

47,925

FY 2023

48,059

46,051

FY 2022

41,208

39,868

FY 2021

39,637

38,401

FY 2020

45,397

44,048

FY 2019

49,462

48,133

In May 2025, VA took bold action to reduce veteran homelessness by launching its Getting Veterans Off the Street initiative, in which every VA health care system across the country hosted dedicated outreach surge events to locate unsheltered veterans and offer them immediate access to housing programs, health care, behavioral health services, and VA benefits. Getting Veterans Off the Street helped move 25,065 unsheltered veterans to interim (emergency and transition) or permanent housing.

“This is life-changing and in many cases life-saving work,” said Paul Roberts, Interim Director VA ECHCS. “We are proud of the progress VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System is making to get veterans off the streets and are redoubling our efforts to continue this momentum moving forward.”

These efforts complement President Trump’s May executive order to establish a National Center for Warrior Independence for Homeless Veterans on the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center campus. The National Center for Warrior Independence for Homeless Veterans aims to provide housing and support for up to 6,000 homeless veterans from across the nation by 2028.

Every day, VA staff and community partners across the country help veterans find permanent housing – such as apartments or houses to rent or own – often with subsidies to help make the housing more affordable. In some cases, VA teams and partners help veterans end their homelessness by reuniting them with family and friends.

Visit VA.gov/homeless to learn about housing initiatives and other programs supporting homeless Veterans.