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VA Assistance

A sleep disorder caused or worsened by military service is a service-connected condition under VA law. Establishing that connection, and getting it rated correctly, is a procedural process the VA will not walk you through.

This pillar covers each step: from the discharge that may have already weakened your future claim, through the documentation that builds it, to the appeal that recovers it when the VA gets it wrong.

The four-stage pathway

From discharge to rating to appeal

Most veterans land in the middle of this process without realizing it’s a process. The four stages below are sequential. Knowing where you are protects your claim.

Stage

1

Stage

2

Stage

3

Stage

4

Three things this pillar does not do.

It is not a substitute for a Veterans Service Organization. It is not legal advice. It is not a guarantee that a service-connected sleep disorder will be rated the way it should be.

What it does is name the steps, document the evidence requirements, and surface the procedural traps the VA’s own publications gloss over, so that you know what’s supposed to happen, and you can tell when it isn’t happening.

Living document – Updated as rules change

VA Sleep Disorder Rating Rules: Current Status

The rating schedule for sleep apnea has been the subject of a proposed rule since February 2022. As of May 2026, no final rule has been published. This dated companion article tracks what is actually in force, what is proposed, and what veterans should know about timing their claims.

Read the current status

Skip ahead

Where are you in the process?

If you already know which stage you’re in, jump straight to the right material. The phrasing below matches the question you’d type into a search bar at midnight.

“I’m still in service or just got out, and I have a sleep problem.”

Stage 1: Discharge

“I’m filing or about to file a claim and need to know what to submit.”

Stage 2: Claim

“I got denied or my rating is too low and I want to appeal.”

Stage 4: Appeal

You might also need

A claim is built from three things

A correct diagnosis, a documented service connection, and a treatment record. The other three pillars build each of those.

Sleep Disorders

Most claims succeed or fail on the precision of the diagnosis. Make sure yours is named correctly before filing.

For Example
Sleep Apnea in Veterans

Duty vs Biology

A nexus letter argues that your service caused your disorder. This pillar documents the structural mechanisms that connection rests on.

For Example
Sleep Deprivation as Doctrine

What Works

Treatment records are part of the documentation a strong claim requires. Evidence-graded treatment also strengthens functional-impact arguments.

For Example
CBT-I in VA Settings

A note from the editors

The VA owes you the disability rating that accurately reflects how much your service-connected sleep disorder affects your functioning. It does not always deliver that rating on the first try. The procedural process exists because the system makes mistakes, sometimes administratively, sometimes substantively, sometimes systemically. Knowing the process is how you protect yourself from those mistakes.

You Are Not Alone

Sleep disorders, PTSD, and the invisible wounds of service can feel isolating. If you or someone you know is in crisis or experiencing thoughts of self-harm, help is available right now. The Veterans Crisis Line provides free, confidential support 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to veterans, service members, and their families.

If you are in crisis or experiencing thoughts of self-harm, call the Veterans Crisis Line at

Veterans Crisis Line