Community-Focused Veteran Care

Hearing care for the veteran community.

Audiology 4 Vets brings casual, community-centered hearing care to veterans nationwide. Walk-in mobile clinics at VFW posts, easy access to hearing aid fitting and verification, Veterans Choice coordination, and tinnitus counseling — no paperwork hassles, just straightforward hearing health support for those who served.

Veteran receiving a hearing screening with a portable Kuduwave audiometer
50+
VFW Partner Locations
Walk-In
Mobile Clinics
8M+
Veterans Served
0
Paperwork Required

Easy Hearing Care for Veterans

Walk-in mobile clinics at VFW posts, hearing aid fitting and verification, tinnitus counseling, and Veterans Choice program coordination without the bureaucracy.

Walk-In Mobile Days

No appointment needed — stop by our mobile clinic at your local VFW post on scheduled screening days.

Community VFW Partnerships

Working with VFW posts nationwide to bring hearing services directly to veteran gathering places.

Veterans Choice Coordination

Full coordination with VA Choice program for benefits and reimbursement — we handle the paperwork.

Hearing Aid Fitting & Verification

Modern hearing aids, custom programming, and real-ear verification in a relaxed community setting.

Tinnitus Counseling

Practical tinnitus management and sound therapy options designed for veteran needs.

On-Base Mobile Service

Mobile clinics also available at military installations for active-duty and reserve personnel.

Community Veteran Hearing News

VFW partnerships, veteran hearing health insights, and stories from our clinics.

Educational

VFW Mobile Clinic Network Expands to 65 Posts: New Screening Locations Open Nationwide in May

Community-based hearing screenings run out of Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) posts address a persistent gap in veteran care: access. Many veterans, particularly in rural areas, live far from a VA medical center or an audiology clinic, and the friction of travel, appointments, and paperwork keeps them from getting a baseline hearing evaluation. Meeting veterans at a trusted, familiar location lowers that barrier and reaches people who might otherwise never get tested.

A walk-in screening is not a substitute for a full diagnostic audiologic evaluation, but it serves an important triage role. A brief screening can flag likely hearing loss and prompt a referral for comprehensive testing by a licensed audiologist — which is where diagnosis, candidacy for hearing aids, and any service-connection documentation actually happen. Framing screenings as the on-ramp to care, rather than the endpoint, keeps expectations accurate.

Portable, boothless audiometers make this model feasible by delivering clinically valid air-conduction testing without a permanent sound booth, so a screening can be set up in a post hall or community room. Veterans identified through these events can then be connected to VA audiology or community-care providers for follow-up, hearing aids, and any benefits they may be eligible for.

Sources: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

May 3, 20269 min read
Informative

VA Hearing Benefit Changes in May 2026: What Veterans Need to Know About Modernized Coverage

The VA is the largest single purchaser and provider of hearing aids in the United States, and it delivers hearing aids and audiology services to eligible veterans — including batteries, repairs, and follow-up care — at no cost when the veteran qualifies. Because the program operates at that scale, updates to device availability, fitting protocols, and telehealth options can meaningfully change what a veteran experiences at an appointment.

Eligibility for VA hearing aids is broader than many veterans assume: it is not limited only to those with a service-connected hearing condition. Veterans may qualify based on service connection, but also through certain other criteria such as specific health conditions, former POW status, or other qualifying circumstances. The reliable way to confirm eligibility is to enroll in VA health care and be evaluated by VA audiology rather than to assume ineligibility.

Veterans should verify current coverage and any procedural changes through official VA channels, since specifics evolve and vary by individual eligibility. Bringing prior audiograms and a clear service history to an appointment helps the audiologist tailor the plan, and asking about tinnitus management and telehealth follow-up can expand the care options available between visits.

Sources: VA — Assistive Devices & Hearing Aids; American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

May 10, 20268 min read
Field Notes

After 30 Years of Hearing Loss, a Master Sergeant Finally Got Help at His Local VFW Clinic — His Family Noticed the Difference

The pattern in this story is common enough to be almost universal among older veterans: the person with hearing loss adapts, compensates, and quietly withdraws long before they seek help. Studies consistently find that people wait years — often a decade or more — between first noticing hearing difficulty and doing something about it. For veterans with noise-induced loss from service, that delay can be compounded by the belief that reduced hearing is simply the cost of the job.

What often finally moves someone to act is the effect on relationships. Untreated hearing loss is associated in the research with social withdrawal, communication strain, and reduced quality of life, and family members frequently feel the distance before the veteran acknowledges it. Modern hearing aids, properly fitted, can restore much of the everyday audibility that makes conversation and connection possible again — which is why a spouse's or family member's encouragement is so often the turning point.

Community touchpoints like a VFW clinic lower the stakes of that first step by making evaluation feel routine rather than clinical. Once a veteran is in the door, a screening can lead to comprehensive testing, hearing aids, and connection to any VA benefits they qualify for — turning a long-avoided decision into a manageable one.

Sources: NIDCD — Hearing Loss in Older Adults; American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

May 17, 20266 min read

Find hearing care in your community.

Look for our mobile clinics at VFW posts nationwide. No appointment needed — walk in on clinic days.

2026 Industry Update

Where occupational hearing standards meet veteran hearing programs.

As of 2026, OSHA's Occupational Noise Exposure standard (29 CFR 1910.95) continues to require a hearing conservation program for workers exposed to noise at or above an 85-decibel 8-hour time-weighted average, with audiometers calibrated to the ANSI/ASA S3.6 specification. Remote supervision via teleaudiology satisfies the technician-supervision requirement when the supervisory relationship is documented for each day of testing — reinforcing the role of properly calibrated, well-documented equipment in every occupational and clinical hearing program, including the community veteran hearing programs we run.

Free Guide · PDF

The Walk-In Hearing Guide for Vets

Download our free illustrated guide — practical, current, and written for 2026.

↓ Download the eBook
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What hearing services do you offer?
Hearing screenings, diagnostic audiometric testing, hearing aid fittings, and follow-up care.
Do you work with veterans and VA benefits?
Yes. We help eligible veterans access hearing care and hearing aids through applicable VA programs.
How often should hearing be tested?
Adults should have a baseline test and periodic re-checks, especially with noise exposure or noticeable changes in hearing.
How do I book an appointment?
Call (424) 204-2382 or email info@audiology4vets.com to schedule.
Devin Lockett, Founder
About the Founder

Devin Lockett

Devin Lockett is the founder and entrepreneur behind this venture and the wider BiomedRx family of companies—spanning healthcare technology, wellness, media, and community initiatives. He builds brands focused on quality, service, and independent ownership.

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