The Benefits Navigator is a new imprint of The Baratelli Institute, built for the families and advisors navigating government benefits — veterans seeking the disability compensation they've earned, families facing the Medicaid long-term-care maze, disabled adults working the SSDI/SSI system. Plain-English guides, free interactive tools, and workbooks. Calm, dignified, accurate. Honest about where free help already exists.
An independent research library for the families and advisors navigating government benefits. We do not file claims for a fee. We do not sell leads. We point you to free, accredited help — and we tell you what to ask once you're there. The imprint inherits the Institute's editorial standards and shares its production engine; the audience is different, the voice is different, and the colors are teal (not the Institute's gold) so you always know which library you're reading.
— Phil Baratelli, CPA, MBA · Founder, The Baratelli Institute
Veterans Crisis Line: dial 988, then Press 1. Or text 838255. Free, confidential, 24/7 — for veterans, service members, and the people who love them. You do not have to be enrolled in VA care, and you do not have to be in crisis to call. This page can wait.
Government-benefits systems — VA disability, Medicaid long-term care, SSDI/SSI — share a structural problem the Institute's engine is built to solve: the official material is unreadable, the predatory "claim shark" tier is aggressive and often charges illegal fees, and the legitimate paid counsel is necessary but expensive and engaged 1:1. The honest middle — a credible, comprehensive, plain-English reference any family can hold — is largely missing. That is the gap.
Each flagship in the imprint runs the same nine-beat spine: Am I eligible · Prove it · Apply · Read the decision · Appeal · The benefit math · Keep the award · Coordinate with other programs · Get help honestly. Build the spine once; each flagship reuses it for its program. That's how a single small team can responsibly cover three of the most-needed and most-underserved benefit fields in the country.
The imprint · one spine, three flagships
Each flagship is a print-quality reference guide with a companion workbook, a free 5-page primer, and a layer of free interactive tools at the imprint's website. Each commits to a free-to-the-individual-in-need lane, always.
137 pages, 32 chapters across nine parts, five composite veteran cases, a 13-tab workbook, and six free tools. The plain-English reference for veterans seeking the service-connected disability compensation they've earned — from the first question to the final appeal. Covers service connection (direct, secondary, presumptive), the PACT Act burn-pit and Agent Orange paths, the combined-rating math, the C&P exam, TDIU and SMC, the AMA appeal lanes (HLR, Supplemental, Board, CUE), and the survivor benefit (DIC). Calm, dignified, honest about where free help exists.
For the family facing the nursing-home or in-home-care decision and the Medicaid asset-and-income test that comes with it. Five-year lookback, spousal impoverishment protections, the qualified income trust (Miller trust), pooled trusts, the home equity rules, the estate-recovery program, and the planning windows that close on the date of admission. Because it is also asset planning, this flagship will be cross-listed under the Institute's wealth side.
For the disabled adult, the parent of a disabled child, or the advisor working the Social Security disability system. SSDI vs SSI gates, the listing of impairments, the residual functional capacity assessment, the reconsideration / ALJ hearing / Appeals Council / federal court ladder, the substantial gainful activity line, work incentives, and the interaction with state Medicaid eligibility. Pairs structurally with the VA Disability Playbook for veterans who also need to coordinate the two systems.
Where this fits next to the Institute's wealth library
The Baratelli Institute's wealth library is written for the practitioner desk — CFOs, controllers, RIAs, family-office staff, attorneys, accredited counsel. The voice is dry and precise; the colors are gold and navy; the price points reflect a career-grade desk reference shelf. The Benefits Navigator is the same publisher with the same standards pointed at a different reader: the veteran, the disabled adult, the caregiver, the family member, and the advisor who refers clients to those systems but does not handle the work in-house. The voice is calm and human; the colors are teal and navy; the pricing is built around an always-free path for the person in need.
If you are an advisor — CFO, RIA, estate-planning attorney, CPA, financial planner — this imprint is here so your clients can ask you better questions about the benefits the family is already entitled to. You do not need to add VA-accreditation, Medicaid-planning, or SSDI representation to your practice to be useful here; you need a reference your client can hold. That is what we publish.
Browse the Institute's full wealth library → · All free tools across both libraries →
Philip A. Baratelli, CPA, MBA — Founder, The Baratelli Institute. Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. Twenty-plus years in operating finance and M&A, including the corporate controller and treasurer seat at a public-company industrial business and Family Office CFO experience. The Benefits Navigator imprint exists because the same production discipline that built the Institute's wealth-practitioner library — long-form reference, companion workbook, free interactive tools, crisp editorial committee — turns out to be exactly what is missing in the consumer-facing government-benefits space.
The author is not VA-accredited and does not file VA claims for a fee. The imprint is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or the Social Security Administration.