Welcome to the official website of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Discover, apply for, and manage your VA benefits and care.
Download the United States Department of Veterans Affairs logo as a transparent PNG. The API can also return SVG, WebP, dark, and black-and-white versions.

1930–1979
Veterans Administration seal
The Veterans Administration operated under a circular seal derived from traditional federal heraldry, combining an eagle and stars motif common to New Deal-era government agencies. The seal served both as an official emblem and a logotype, without a separate standalone monogram.
1979–1989
Grear VA monogram
Designed by Malcolm Grear
Providence-based designer Malcolm Grear created the interlocking VA monogram in July 1979, applying a strict geometric approach characteristic of American modernism. The mark pairs a sharp V with a broad-based A, set in the Univers typeface for the accompanying wordmark, giving the Veterans Administration a compact symbol that worked independently of the circular seal.
Use the Logo API to embed the United States Department of Veterans Affairs logo and millions of others directly in your app or website. Get a free API key to get started.
<img src="https://img.logo.dev/va.gov?token=YOUR_API_TOKEN" alt="va.gov logo" />1989–2012
Department of Veterans Affairs
When President Reagan signed the Department of Veterans Affairs Act on October 25, 1988, the agency was elevated to cabinet-level status effective March 15, 1989. A department-wide design competition produced a new official seal incorporating traditional patriotic symbols; Grear's VA monogram was retained alongside it as the primary visual identifier.
2012–present · current
Current wordmark
In August 2012 the department updated its wordmark, replacing the earlier Univers-style typography with a tighter, more uniform sans-serif treatment while keeping the Grear monogram unchanged. The revised system established clearer typographic hierarchy across VA communications, with 'Department of' set above 'Veterans Affairs' in consistent weight and spacing.
Apple
apple.com