Respiratory · 38 CFR 4.97 · Diagnostic Code 6847
Sleep Apnea VA Disability Rating
TL;DR. Sleep apnea is rated under DC 6847 at 0/30/50/100%. A veteran whose sleep apnea is severe enough to require a CPAP machine automatically rates at the 50% bracket — one of the highest objective-criteria floors in the VA schedule. To win the claim, you need a sleep study (PSG) showing AHI ≥ 5 plus a service-connection nexus. Sleep apnea is one of the highest-success secondary-to-PTSD claims. Late diagnosis is common; in-service snoring/apnea symptoms documented by buddy statements support claims for veterans diagnosed years after separation.
What sleep apnea is in VA disability terms
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is repetitive episodes of partial or complete upper airway collapse during sleep, causing oxygen desaturation, sleep fragmentation, and downstream cardiovascular/cognitive consequences. The clinical diagnosis is made by polysomnography (PSG) — an overnight sleep study that measures apnea-hypopnea events. The apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) is the average number of apnea + hypopnea events per hour of sleep:
- AHI 0–4: Normal (no apnea diagnosis).
- AHI 5–14: Mild OSA.
- AHI 15–29: Moderate OSA.
- AHI 30+: Severe OSA.
The VA uses the medical definition for diagnosis but does NOT use the AHI as a rating driver. The rating brackets are tied to treatment requirements (CPAP needed or not) and downstream complications (respiratory failure, tracheostomy), not to the AHI number. This means a veteran with mild OSA (AHI 8) who requires CPAP rates the same as a veteran with severe OSA (AHI 50) who requires CPAP — both at 50%.
OSA is the most common form rated by the VA. Central sleep apnea (CSA) and mixed-type apnea are rated under the same DC 6847.
How the VA rates sleep apnea (DC 6847)
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| 0% | Asymptomatic but with documented sleep disorder breathing. |
| 30% | Persistent day-time hypersomnolence (excessive sleepiness). |
| 50% | Requires use of breathing-assist device such as continuous airway pressure (CPAP) machine. |
| 100% | Chronic respiratory failure with carbon dioxide retention or cor pulmonale, OR requires tracheostomy. |
The bracket structure has several important features:
- The 50% bracket is the most common rating. Most veterans with diagnosed OSA are prescribed CPAP, and the prescription alone establishes the 50%. CPAP compliance is NOT required — what matters is the prescription. Veterans who try CPAP and abandon it due to intolerance still rate at 50%.
- The 30% bracket is rare in practice. "Persistent day-time hypersomnolence" without CPAP requirement describes a very narrow case — clinically diagnosed sleep apnea, symptomatic, but treated with positional therapy or weight loss alone. Most veterans go straight from 0% (asymptomatic) to 50% (CPAP).
- The 100% bracket is reserved for severe complications. Tracheostomy or chronic CO2 retention is end-stage OSA, typically only in veterans with multi-decade untreated disease.
- There is no path between 50% and 100%. The bracket jump is dramatic. Either you have respiratory failure / tracheostomy (100%) or you don't (50% on CPAP).
Service-connection paths for sleep apnea
Direct service connection
The traditional path requires in-service symptoms. Common in-service evidence:
- STRs documenting "snoring" complaints, witnessed apneas during morning formations, or sleep clinic referrals;
- Performance evaluations noting excessive sleepiness or trouble maintaining alertness;
- Buddy statements from barracks roommates or deployment colleagues describing your loud snoring and witnessed pauses in breathing;
- In-service sleep study (rare but increasingly common for active-duty members at large military medical centers).
Even without an in-service diagnosis, a veteran who can document symptom onset during service plus continuous symptoms to current diagnosis has a strong direct claim. The VA uses the "continuity of symptomatology" doctrine under 38 CFR 3.303(b) to bridge the gap between in-service symptoms and post-service diagnosis.
Secondary to PTSD — the most common winning theory
Sleep apnea secondary to PTSD is one of the highest-success secondary claims in the VA system. The medical literature supports multiple mechanisms:
- Sympathetic activation: Chronic PTSD-driven sympathetic nervous system overactivity contributes to upper airway tone changes during sleep.
- Weight gain: PTSD medications (especially SSRIs and atypical antipsychotics) and PTSD-related lifestyle factors drive weight gain, which is a major OSA risk factor.
- Sleep architecture disruption: PTSD nightmares and hyperarousal disrupt normal sleep stages, exacerbating any underlying breathing abnormality.
A nexus letter from a sleep specialist or treating psychiatrist citing this medical literature is the strongest evidence for a secondary claim. Many veterans with service-connected PTSD have won sleep apnea as a 50% secondary rating without needing to prove in-service onset.
Secondary to other conditions
Sleep apnea is also commonly claimed as secondary to:
- Asthma or other respiratory conditions. Upper airway inflammation from asthma exacerbates OSA.
- Hypothyroidism. Reduced metabolic rate and tongue enlargement increase OSA risk.
- Diabetes type II. Both conditions share metabolic syndrome risk factors.
- Allergic rhinitis / chronic sinusitis. Upper airway obstruction contributes to OSA.
Presumptive considerations (PACT Act)
OSA is not on the Agent Orange presumptive list, but veterans with PACT Act qualifying exposure (burn pits, airborne hazards) and chronic respiratory conditions may have OSA recognized as part of a broader respiratory presumptive picture. Direct claims are usually stronger; presumptive theories supplement.
Evidence the VA looks for
- Sleep study (PSG) report. Non-negotiable. The PSG must come from an accredited sleep lab and show AHI ≥ 5. Home sleep tests (HST) can support but PSG is the gold standard. A CPAP titration study is even better.
- CPAP prescription. The 50% rating turns on this. The prescription must be active (not just historical) at the time of the rating determination.
- CPAP compliance data (optional). Many modern CPAP machines record usage hours. Compliance reports help confirm ongoing requirement but are NOT required for the rating.
- STR mentions. Any in-service complaints related to snoring, daytime sleepiness, witnessed apneas. Even a single mention is valuable.
- Buddy statements. Barracks roommates, spouses (for married veterans), deployment colleagues describing in-service snoring and apnea-like behavior. These are particularly important for late-diagnosis claims.
- Nexus opinion (for secondary claims). A treating sleep specialist, psychiatrist, or PCP letter linking the OSA to a service-connected primary condition.
- BMI / weight history. Weight gain trajectory is relevant for both direct and secondary claims (especially PTSD-secondary, where weight gain from medication is documented).
The sleep apnea C&P exam
The OSA C&P exam is typically brief because the diagnosis is established by the PSG. The examiner:
- Reviews the PSG and CPAP prescription;
- Asks about current symptoms (daytime sleepiness, fatigue, headaches);
- Documents CPAP use and any complications;
- Completes the DBQ (21-0960L-2).
The examiner does NOT order a new PSG — they rely on the existing one. If you don't have a PSG, the C&P examiner may order one through QTC/LHI/VES; this adds 30–60 days to the claim timeline.
Preparation tips:
- Bring a copy of the PSG report. The examiner has access via the VA system but bringing a paper copy avoids delays.
- Bring CPAP compliance data (download from your CPAP device or request from your sleep doctor).
- Describe current symptoms accurately. The 30% bracket turns on "persistent daytime hypersomnolence" which is the fallback rating if the CPAP requirement is later contested.
- If you've tried CPAP and discontinued, explain why — intolerance, claustrophobia, mask leak. The 50% rating still applies as long as the prescription is current.
Common rating pitfalls
- Filing without a sleep study. The VA will not grant sleep apnea based on symptom report alone. A PSG is required. If you suspect OSA, get a sleep study before filing.
- Filing direct service connection when PTSD-secondary is stronger. Veterans with service-connected PTSD often have a much easier path via secondary connection than direct. The PSG + nexus letter + medical-literature citation pattern is well-established.
- Missing in-service symptom evidence for late-diagnosis claims. Buddy statements from spouses or barracks roommates are powerful but often overlooked. Request statements from anyone who shared sleeping quarters with you during service.
- Confusing CPAP compliance with the 50% rating. The 50% is set by CPAP being required, not by compliance. Veterans who tried CPAP and abandoned it still rate at 50% as long as the prescription is current.
- Not pursuing secondary claims FROM sleep apnea. Sleep apnea is itself a foundation for further secondary claims — hypertension, cardiovascular disease, diabetes type II, depression. Stack the secondaries.
Secondary claims FROM sleep apnea
Once OSA is service-connected, several common secondary claims open up:
- Hypertension (DC 7101). Repetitive nocturnal hypoxia drives sustained daytime hypertension. Direct and well-documented.
- Ischemic heart disease (DC 7005). Chronic OSA accelerates atherosclerosis.
- Depression (DC 9434). Chronic sleep deprivation from untreated OSA correlates strongly with mood disorders.
- Diabetes type II (DC 7913). Shared metabolic-syndrome pathway.
- Erectile dysfunction (DC 7522). Both via hypogonadism from chronic sleep deprivation and via cardiovascular effects.
Worked example
Veteran: Army, 2 deployments to Iraq. Service-connected PTSD at 70%. Diagnosed with OSA in 2024 via PSG (AHI 22); prescribed auto-CPAP at 12 cm H2O. Married, 2 children under 18.
- Path: Sleep apnea secondary to PTSD. Nexus letter from sleep specialist citing PTSD ↔ OSA medical literature.
- Rating: 50% (requires CPAP).
- Combined rating: PTSD 70% + Sleep apnea 50% = 70 + 50 × 0.30 = 85 → rounded 90%.
- 2026 monthly compensation at 90% with spouse + 2 children: $2,241.91 + $190.91 + 2 × $168.13 = $2,769.08/mo.
- Prior compensation at PTSD-only 70%: $1,716.28 + $148.49 + 2 × $130.77 = $2,126.31/mo.
Adding service-connected sleep apnea: +$642.77/mo ≈ +$7,713/year. The 50% sleep apnea rating effectively converts a 70% combined to a 90% combined.
Sources cited in this article
- 38 CFR 4.97 — Schedule of ratings: respiratory
- 38 CFR 3.310 — Secondary service connection
- VA DBQ — Sleep Disorders (Including Sleep Apnea)
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