Tinnitus is rated at a flat 10% under DC 6260, with no higher single rating available regardless of severity. This 10% applies whether tinnitus is bilateral or unilateral. However, tinnitus serves as a foundation for secondary conditions — including anxiety, insomnia, and depression — that may be separately ratable at higher percentages.
Disclaimer: Semper Solutus provides medical documentation services and educational information. We do not prepare or submit claims or represent veterans before the VA. This page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice.

Understanding Tinnitus VA Disability

Tinnitus — the perception of ringing, buzzing, or hissing in the ears without an external sound source — is the single most commonly claimed VA disability. The VA rates tinnitus under 38 CFR § 4.87, Diagnostic Code 6260, at a flat 10% regardless of frequency or severity. Despite the fixed rating, tinnitus is often a gateway condition supporting secondary conditions at higher ratings.

VA Rating Schedule for Tinnitus

The VA rates tinnitus 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
10% The only available rating for tinnitus under DC 6260 — a flat 10% for any confirmed recurrent tinnitus diagnosis, regardless of severity, bilaterality, or daily impact. There is no 0% or higher percentage rating available for tinnitus.

How a Nexus Letter Helps Your Tinnitus 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 tinnitus must establish that the veteran's tinnitus is medically connected to noise exposure or acoustic trauma during military service. Military service commonly exposes veterans to hazardous noise from weapons fire, aircraft, vehicle engines, explosions, and machinery — all exceeding safe noise limits. The physician should document: the veteran's occupational noise exposure history (MOS, duty stations, weapons used, proximity to explosives or aircraft); any in-service audiometric testing showing noise-induced changes; the current audiological findings confirming tinnitus; and the medical rationale connecting cumulative service noise exposure to the current tinnitus. A nexus letter for tinnitus is often concise but must be clinically specific — referencing the dose-response relationship between cumulative noise exposure and tinnitus onset.

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 Tinnitus

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 tinnitus may be able to claim additional compensation for related conditions. The following conditions are frequently documented as secondary to tinnitus:

Hearing Loss

Tinnitus and sensorineural hearing loss share the same noise-induced cochlear damage mechanism.

Anxiety Disorder

Chronic tinnitus is a documented cause of hyperarousal, hypervigilance, and anxiety disorders.

Depression / MDD

Severe tinnitus causing sleep disruption and psychological distress can lead to secondary depression.

Migraines

Tinnitus and migraines share neurological underpinnings and frequently co-occur.

Medical Evidence That Strengthens a Tinnitus VA Claim

Key evidence: military occupational records documenting hazardous noise exposure; in-service audiograms showing progressive noise-induced threshold shifts (if available); current audiological evaluation documenting tinnitus; in-service sick call records for ear complaints; and a nexus letter from an audiologist or physician. Lay evidence — personal statements and buddy letters describing noise exposure — is particularly valuable when formal audiometric records are limited.

Frequently Asked Questions: Tinnitus VA Disability

Under DC 6260, the VA established tinnitus as a single-evaluation condition at 10% because tinnitus is inherently subjective and variable. There is no provision for higher ratings based on severity. However, veterans with severe tinnitus can pursue secondary conditions — anxiety, depression, insomnia — that are separately ratable at higher percentages.

Yes. Under DC 6260, the 10% rating applies whether tinnitus is unilateral or bilateral. The same single 10% rating applies regardless of which ear or ears are affected.

Yes. Tinnitus is rated separately from hearing loss. If both are service-connected, they receive separate ratings — 10% for tinnitus, variable for hearing loss — that are then combined using the VA's combined ratings formula.

Having service-connected tinnitus helps establish a record of significant noise exposure. Secondary conditions like anxiety disorder or depression caused by chronic tinnitus can be claimed with a nexus letter linking the psychological impact of tinnitus to the secondary diagnosis.

Related Conditions & Resources

Veterans with tinnitus often pursue claims for related conditions. Use the disability rating calculator or explore related condition guides:

Hearing Loss Anxiety Disorder Depression / Major Depressive Disorder VA Rating Calculator What Is a Nexus Letter? All VA Conditions