Understanding Migraines VA Disability
Migraines are a prevalent VA disability condition among veterans, particularly those with TBI, PTSD, cervical spine conditions, or toxic exposure histories. The VA rates migraines under 38 CFR § 4.124a, Diagnostic Code 8100, based on the frequency of prostrating attacks — attacks severe enough to prevent most activity.
VA Rating Schedule for Migraines
The VA rates migraines under the VA Schedule for Rating Disabilities (38 CFR). The following table shows each possible rating level and what it represents clinically. Your rating is based on the severity of symptoms documented during a Compensation and Pension (C&P) examination and supported by your medical records.
| Rating | Clinical Criteria & Functional Impairment |
|---|---|
| 0% | Migraines present but infrequent and non-prostrating; minimal functional impact. |
| 10% | Prostrating attacks that occur less than once per month. |
| 30% | Prostrating attacks occurring on average once per month with some prolonged symptoms. |
| 50% | Very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged attacks with characteristic prodrome; 6 or more attacks per year with significant disability between attacks. |
How a Nexus Letter Helps Your Migraines VA Claim
A nexus letter is a medical opinion, written and signed by a licensed physician, that establishes the connection between a veteran's current diagnosis and their military service. The VA requires this "nexus" as one of three elements for service connection under 38 CFR § 3.303: a current diagnosis, an in-service event or injury, and a medical link between the two.
A nexus letter for migraines must establish that the veteran's migraine disorder is medically connected to their service — either directly (TBI from blast exposure, in-service head injury, chemical exposure) or as a secondary condition (migraines caused or worsened by service-connected TBI, PTSD, cervical spine pathology, or hypertension). For TBI-secondary migraines: post-traumatic headaches following concussion are among the most well-documented secondary condition relationships. The nexus letter should explain how traumatic damage to pain processing pathways and neurovascular regulatory systems causes migraine-type headaches. For PTSD-secondary migraines: chronic hyperarousal, sleep disruption, and stress sensitization are established migraine triggers. The physician must document: current migraine diagnosis with frequency and prostrating character; objective triggers (photophobia, phonophobia, nausea); medication requirements; and the rationale connecting the primary condition to the migraine disorder.
Semper Solutus provides MD-authored nexus letters written by physicians experienced in VA rating criteria and 38 CFR standards. Our letters use the "at least as likely as not" language required by VA adjudication standards and include a thorough review of all available medical records.
Secondary Conditions Commonly Linked to Migraines
When a condition is caused or aggravated by a service-connected disability, it may qualify for secondary service connection under 38 CFR § 3.310. This means veterans with service-connected migraines may be able to claim additional compensation for related conditions. The following conditions are frequently documented as secondary to migraines:
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Post-traumatic headaches following TBI are a primary cause of secondary migraines in veterans.
PTSD
Chronic stress and hyperarousal from PTSD are established migraine triggers.
Cervical Spine / Neck Pain
Cervicogenic headaches from cervical pathology can trigger or worsen migraines.
Depression / MDD
Depression and migraines have bidirectional relationships and frequently co-occur.
Medical Evidence That Strengthens a Migraines VA Claim
Key evidence: neurologist or headache specialist records with migraine diagnosis; headache diary documenting frequency, duration, and severity; documentation of prostrating nature; medication records (preventive and abortive treatments); records of the primary service-connected condition if secondary claim; and a nexus letter from a neurologist or physician. Personal statements and buddy letters describing witnessed migraine episodes strengthen the claim.
Frequently Asked Questions: Migraines VA Disability
A prostrating attack prevents you from performing most normal activities — you must lie down in a dark, quiet room and are unable to work during the attack. The VA requires documentation that attacks are truly prostrating. Physician records noting the severity of attacks are essential.
Yes. Post-traumatic headaches are specifically evaluated within the TBI rating system as the subjective symptoms facet, but can also be rated separately under DC 8100 if that produces a higher combined evaluation.
A headache diary documenting the date, time, duration, severity, and activities missed during each migraine attack is powerful evidence — it provides objective, longitudinal data on attack frequency, the primary determinant of the rating level.
Yes, but it requires very frequent completely prostrating attacks — generally 6 or more per year — that are prolonged and with prolonged accompanying symptoms. Documentation from a neurologist confirming frequency and character of attacks is essential.
Related Conditions & Resources
Veterans with migraines often pursue claims for related conditions. Use the disability rating calculator or explore related condition guides: