A Denial Is Not the End
Receiving a denial letter from the VA is frustrating and demoralizing, but it is not the final word on your claim. The VA denies a significant percentage of initial claims, and many of those denials are successfully overturned on appeal. The key is understanding which appeal lane gives you the best chance of success for your specific situation and acting within the required timelines.
Since 2019, the Appeals Modernization Act (AMA) has given veterans three distinct appeal options, commonly called "lanes." Each lane has different rules, different timelines, and is best suited for different types of denials. Under 38 CFR 19.5, all appeals filed after February 19, 2019, follow the AMA framework. Understanding these lanes is the difference between spinning your wheels and getting your claim approved.
Critical Deadline: You have one year from the date on your decision letter to file an appeal in any lane. If you miss this deadline, you may lose the ability to receive benefits retroactive to your original filing date. Do not wait.
Lane 1: Supplemental Claim (Best When You Have New Evidence)
A Supplemental Claim is the right choice when you have new and relevant evidence that was not part of your original claim. "New and relevant" means evidence that was not previously submitted to the VA and that relates to the reason your claim was denied. This is the most commonly used appeal lane and often the fastest path to approval.
When to Use a Supplemental Claim
- Your claim was denied for lack of a medical nexus, and you now have a nexus letter from a qualified provider
- You have new medical records documenting your condition or its connection to service
- You obtained buddy statements that were not in your original claim
- A new law or regulation applies to your claim (for example, the PACT Act added your condition as presumptive)
- Your condition has worsened and you have documentation to prove it
How to File
File VA Form 20-0995 (Decision Review Request: Supplemental Claim) along with your new evidence. You can file online at VA.gov, by mail, or in person. Include a clear cover letter explaining what new evidence you are submitting and how it addresses the reason for your denial.
Timeline
Supplemental Claims are typically decided within 4 to 5 months. If approved, your effective date goes back to the date of your original claim (if filed within one year of the denial), preserving all retroactive benefits.
Lane 2: Higher Level Review (Best When the VA Made an Error)
A Higher Level Review is the right choice when you believe the VA made a mistake in evaluating your existing evidence. This lane does not allow you to submit new evidence. Instead, a more senior VA reviewer examines the same evidence that was already in your file and determines whether the original decision was correct.
When to Use a Higher Level Review
- The VA ignored or misinterpreted favorable evidence in your file
- The C&P examiner's report contains errors or does not match what happened during your exam
- The VA applied the wrong diagnostic code or rating criteria to your condition
- The VA failed to consider the benefit of the doubt doctrine (38 CFR 3.102), which requires them to resolve reasonable doubt in your favor
- There was a clear and unmistakable error in the decision
How to File
File VA Form 20-0996 (Decision Review Request: Higher Level Review). You cannot submit new evidence with this form, but you can request an informal conference. The informal conference is a phone call with the senior reviewer where you (or your representative) can point out specific errors in the original decision. Always request the informal conference. It gives you a chance to highlight exactly where the VA went wrong.
Timeline
Higher Level Reviews are typically decided within 4 to 5 months. If the reviewer finds an error, they may grant the claim, assign a new rating, or return it for correction. If they identify that new evidence is needed, they may convert your appeal to a Supplemental Claim track.
Lane 3: Board of Veterans Appeals (Best for Complex Cases)
A Board Appeal sends your case to a Veterans Law Judge at the Board of Veterans Appeals (BVA) in Washington, D.C. This is the most formal appeal option and typically takes the longest, but it is the strongest option for complex cases, long-standing denials, or situations where you need a legal ruling on how the VA should interpret the evidence.
When to Use a Board Appeal
- You have been denied multiple times through other lanes and need a fresh legal review
- Your case involves complex legal questions about service connection or rating interpretation
- You want to testify before a judge about your condition and service history
- You have strong evidence but believe the VA regional office is unwilling to grant your claim
Three Board Appeal Options
- Direct Review: The judge reviews your existing file with no new evidence and no hearing. Fastest BVA option.
- Evidence Submission: You can submit additional evidence within 90 days of filing. No hearing.
- Hearing: You testify before a Veterans Law Judge via video or in person. You can also submit new evidence. Best for complex cases where your personal testimony matters.
How to File
File VA Form 10182 (Decision Review Request: Board Appeal). Select which of the three options you want. If you choose the hearing option, you will be scheduled for a hearing date.
Timeline
Board Appeals take significantly longer than the other two lanes. Direct Review averages 12 to 18 months. Evidence Submission averages 12 to 18 months. Hearing requests can take 2 years or more due to scheduling backlogs. Plan accordingly.
How to Choose the Right Lane
Read your denial letter carefully. It will state the specific reason your claim was denied. That reason dictates your best appeal lane:
- "No nexus" or "no medical evidence linking condition to service" — File a Supplemental Claim with a nexus letter.
- "Not enough evidence of current diagnosis" — File a Supplemental Claim with updated medical records and a formal diagnosis.
- The evidence in your file clearly supports your claim but the VA ruled against you — File a Higher Level Review and request an informal conference.
- Denied multiple times or involves complex legal interpretation — File a Board Appeal with a hearing.
Pro Tip: You can use different lanes sequentially. If your Higher Level Review is denied, you can then file a Supplemental Claim with new evidence. If that is denied, you can appeal to the Board. You are not locked into one lane forever.
Ready to Get Your Rating Reviewed?
A denial does not mean the VA was right. It means you need a better strategy. Use our free AI-powered claim analysis to evaluate your denial reason and identify the strongest appeal path for your situation. Our tools can help you understand what evidence you need and which lane gives you the best chance of overturning your denial. Try the VA Disability Calculator to see what an approval would mean for your monthly compensation. Do not let a denial letter be the last word on the benefits you earned.
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