VA Appeals: Complete Guide
Pro Tip: Denials happen constantly—it's practically part of the VA's business model. Here's the silver lining: veterans who appeal win more often than those filing initial claims. Pick your lane, gather your ammunition, and push back.
The One-Year Cliff
Every appeal has a deadline, and missing it hurts badly. You have exactly 365 days from your decision date to file any appeal that preserves your original effective date and potential backpay.
Miss that window by even 24 hours, and your only path back to that effective date is proving Clear and Unmistakable Error (CUE)—a high bar to clear.
Your Three Options
When a claim decision disappoints you, three paths forward exist:
| Lane | Form | Best When |
|---|---|---|
| Higher-Level Review | 20-0996 | Evidence was misread or overlooked |
| Supplemental Claim | 20-0995 | You have new evidence to submit |
| Board of Veterans Appeals | 10182 | You need formal adjudication |
Single-Lane Requirement
You cannot simultaneously pursue two different appeal types for the same issue. Want to switch lanes? Withdraw the current appeal first. Different issues can move through different lanes concurrently.
Decoding Your Decision Letter
Before choosing an appeal path, study your decision letter carefully:
- Verify every piece of submitted evidence appears in the listing
- Identify any favorable findings you can build on
- Note specifically what evidence the rater said was missing
- Check whether you missed required examinations
Getting copies: Access letters at VA.gov under Track Claims. After 10 days from the decision, call 1-800-827-1000 if online access fails.
Higher-Level Review (HLR)
Form 20-0996 requests a senior Decision Review Officer (DRO) to examine your case fresh.
When HLR Works
This option shines when the original rater misinterpreted or overlooked evidence already in your file. The DRO can issue a "difference of opinion"—essentially saying the existing evidence supports a different conclusion than the first rater reached.
What Cannot Happen
DROs cannot make things worse for you through a difference of opinion. If they disagree with the original rating, the only direction is up or unchanged.
Restrictions
- No new evidence after the original decision date
- Cannot file consecutive HLRs for the same issue
- Cannot file HLR after a Board of Veterans Appeals denial
- Intent to File has no application here
Informal Conference
Request this optional conversation to point out factual or legal errors directly to the reviewer. Sometimes the reviewer skips it—that usually means the evidence already supports a positive outcome.
Claim Accuracy Request (CAR)
A pilot program offering 30-day target turnaround for obvious errors. Only VSOs, attorneys, and accredited claims agents can request this, and only within 30 days of the decision notification.
Supplemental Claim
Form 20-0995 lets you submit new and relevant evidence the VA didn't have before.
Ideal Situations
- Service connection denied → gather Independent Medical Opinions, nexus letters, buddy statements
- Rating too low → obtain new medical evidence dated before the original decision
- Missed required exam → note your willingness to attend and reschedule
Evidence Must Be New
Resubmitting the same records accomplishes nothing. You need documentation the VA hasn't seen—new diagnoses, new medical opinions, new witness statements.
Board of Veterans Appeals (BVA)
Form 10182 (Notice of Disagreement) sends your case to an independent Veterans Law Judge.
When to Choose BVA
- HLR or Supplemental Claim didn't resolve the issue
- Your case involves complex legal questions
- You want a formal hearing on the record
Timeline Reality
Board appeals take significantly longer—typically a year or more—but provide thorough independent review.
Denied Service Connection
When the VA says your condition isn't connected to service, examine what's missing:
Current diagnosis - Do you have documented proof the condition exists now?
In-service event - Can you document something happened during military service?
Nexus - Is there medical evidence connecting the two?
If the C&P examiner wrote "less likely than not," a Supplemental Claim with an Independent Medical Opinion challenging that conclusion often succeeds.
Rating Too Low
Your decision letter explains what criteria would support a higher evaluation. Compare those criteria against your C&P examiner's Disability Benefits Questionnaire (DBQ) findings.
DBQ supports higher rating: File Higher-Level Review—the evidence is already there.
DBQ doesn't support higher rating: File Supplemental Claim with new medical evidence showing worsening dated before the decision.
Beyond the Board: Federal Courts
Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (CAVC)
After a BVA denial, you have 120 days—a jurisdictional deadline with no extensions—to file a Notice of Appeal with the CAVC.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Filing location | CAVC eFiling Portal |
| Filing fee | $50 (waivable for hardship) |
| Free legal help | Veterans Consortium Pro Bono Program |
Unique rule: Appeals to courts above the BVA create an exception allowing you to maintain separate appeals at lower levels simultaneously.
Clear and Unmistakable Error (CUE)
When the one-year deadline passes, CUE becomes the only mechanism to challenge old decisions. This doctrine applies when a rater committed an obvious, demonstrable error—not just a judgment call you disagree with.
Examples include misdiagnosis, incorrectly conceding or denying exposure, or applying the wrong regulation. DROs can correct CUEs even if the correction is unfavorable.
Timing and Costs
Average Wait Times (2025)
| Appeal Type | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| Higher-Level Review | ~125 days |
| Supplemental Claim | ~125 days |
| Board of Veterans Appeals | ~365 days |
| CAVC Appeal | 12-18 months |
Attorney and Agent Fees
Legal representatives cannot charge more than 33.3% of resulting backpay, excluding expenses. Payment only occurs if the appeal succeeds. Veterans Service Organizations provide assistance at no cost.
Critical Warnings
Mail timing: The VA processes by receipt date at the intake center, not postmark date. Cutting it close with mail delivery risks missing your deadline.
One day matters: Missing the one-year window by a single day forfeits your earlier effective date and all associated backpay.
Forms and Resources
VA Forms
- VA Form 20-0996 - Higher-Level Review
- VA Form 20-0995 - Supplemental Claim
- VA Form 10182 - Board Appeal (NOD)