Permanent and Total (P&T) Disability: Complete Guide
Pro Tip: P&T status comes with significant advantages—no scheduled reexaminations, Chapter 35 education benefits for dependents, and more. Your award letter won't actually say "Permanent and Total." Instead, look for entitlement to Dependents Educational Assistance (DEA). That's the signal. And despite the name, "permanent" doesn't mean untouchable forever.
What P&T Actually Means
Permanent and Total indicates two things: 1. Your combined rating equals 100% (or you receive TDIU at the 100% rate) 2. Your disabilities are considered static—meaning improvement isn't expected
The VA stops scheduling routine reexaminations for P&T veterans because the conditions are deemed unlikely to change.
The "Permanent" Misconception
Warning: "Permanent" is misleading terminology. Veterans with P&T status can still face rating reductions under certain circumstances—particularly if they haven't held that rating for 20 continuous years.
How the VA Communicates P&T
Your decision letter will never explicitly state "Permanent and Total." Instead, it grants eligibility for Dependents Educational Assistance (DEA/Chapter 35). DEA eligibility is the VA's indirect confirmation of P&T status.
Automatic P&T: Statutory Conditions
Certain severe disabilities automatically confer both 100% rating and permanence:
- Loss of both feet
- Loss of both hands
- Loss of both eyes (visual acuity 5/200 or worse)
- Loss of one foot and one hand
- Loss of one foot and one eye
- Loss of one hand and one eye
- Complete hearing loss in both ears
- Permanent organic loss of speech
- Permanently bedridden status
- Permanent helplessness requiring regular aid and attendance
These conditions also trigger Special Monthly Compensation eligibility.
Non-Statutory P&T
Veterans without statutory conditions achieve P&T when:
Pathway 1: Combined Static Rating
Multiple static disabilities combine to exactly 100% under VA math
Pathway 2: Single Static 100%
One disability rated 100% and designated static
Pathway 3: TDIU on Static Conditions
Unemployability granted based entirely on conditions designated static
When Conditions Become Static
VA Policy Letter 21-01 directs raters to designate conditions static unless:
- The rating schedule specifically mandates future reevaluation
- Statutory law requires periodic assessment
- Strong evidence exists suggesting probable improvement (rare)
Age Protection
Veterans 55 and older, or those rated at minimum compensable levels (10% or higher), generally cannot receive non-static designations without statutory or regulatory requirement.
Commonly Non-Static Conditions
These typically require future reevaluations: - Active cancer (until remission confirmed) - Diabetes insipidus (within 3 months of diagnosis) - Post-Medboard mental health conditions from traumatic stress - Recent stroke (within 6 months) - Newly diagnosed thyroid conditions
Reexaminations
P&T Veterans
Once designated P&T, the VA does not schedule routine reexaminations. Your conditions are considered settled.
Exception
If non-static conditions could qualify you for Special Monthly Compensation, only those specific conditions face periodic review until they stabilize.
Benefits Unlocked by P&T
| Category | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Education | Chapter 35 DEA for dependents (spouse, children) |
| Education | Free or reduced college tuition in some states |
| Financial | Early withdrawal from 401K/IRA without 10% penalty |
| Healthcare | CHAMPVA medical coverage for dependents |
| Healthcare | Non-VA emergency room use with 2-year claim window |
| Property | State property tax exemptions (varies by state) |
| Government | Expedited Social Security Disability processing |
| Travel | Space-A military flights within US territories |
Confirming Your Status
- Log into VA.gov
- Navigate to "VA Letters" section
- Download your Benefit Summary Letter
- Search for: "You are considered to be totally and permanently disabled..."
If that language appears, you have P&T status.
Common Questions
Can P&T veterans work?
Yes, with no restrictions—unless your P&T is based on TDIU. TDIU-based P&T comes with employment limitations tied to income thresholds and sheltered work requirements.
What if I hit 100% combined but wasn't granted P&T?
The VA typically runs an automatic audit within two weeks of reaching 100%. If P&T isn't granted:
- Schedule a VERA appointment requesting EP930 action
- File a Higher-Level Review citing missing DEA entitlement (within one year)
- Submit a new claim specifically for "Entitlement to Dependent's Educational Assistance"
Can I have P&T with some non-static conditions?
Yes. P&T requires only that the conditions forming your 100% rating be static. Other service-connected conditions rated below the 100% threshold don't need static status—they can be non-static without affecting P&T.
Does surgery jeopardize P&T?
No. The VA does not revoke P&T status simply because you undergo surgery for a service-connected condition.
Should I file additional claims once I'm P&T?
Generally, no. New claims open your entire record for potential reevaluation. The risk of losing P&T usually outweighs the potential benefit.
Exceptions worth considering: - Conditions potentially leading to death - Conditions qualifying for higher SMC levels
When does P&T become truly protected?
After 20 continuous years at the same rating level, reductions become nearly impossible (fraud excepted). Before that threshold, P&T offers significant protection but isn't absolute.
What happens if I skip a scheduled exam?
Never miss scheduled C&P examinations. Failure to attend can result in P&T revocation and potential rating reductions for the conditions being examined.