/ Conditions · Mental health

Panic disorder VA Claim Guide

Panic disorder is rated by the VA under the mental health portion of the rating schedule. Mental-health claims hinge on a qualifying diagnosis, an in-service event or stressor, and a nexus opinion. Documenting day-to-day functional impact is what moves the rating.

38 CFR §4.130

Common symptoms

  • Depressed mood, anxiety, or panic
  • Sleep impairment, nightmares, or insomnia
  • Difficulty concentrating or remembering
  • Social withdrawal or irritability
  • Suicidal ideation in severe cases

Common evidence

  • DSM-5 diagnosis from a qualified mental-health provider
  • VA Form 21-0781 (or 21-0781a for MST) stressor statement
  • Lay/buddy statements describing before-and-after changes
  • Service personnel and medical records
  • C&P exam DBQ for Mental Disorders

Primary service connection examples

  • In-service trauma, combat, or stressor event
  • Military sexual trauma (MST)
  • Documented in-service mental-health treatment

Secondary service connection examples

  • Sleep apnea aggravated by the mental-health condition
  • Hypertension secondary to chronic stress
  • GERD or ED secondary to psychotropic medications

Rating basics

Rated 0/10/30/50/70/100% under the General Rating Formula for Mental Disorders based on occupational and social impairment. 70% requires deficiencies in most areas (work, school, family, judgment, mood); 100% requires total occupational and social impairment.

Common denial reasons

  • Diagnosis from a non-qualified provider
  • Stressor not corroborated in service records
  • Examiner concludes symptoms don't meet DSM-5 threshold
  • No nexus opinion linking condition to service