Neurological · 38 CFR 4.124a · Diagnostic Code 8045

TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury) VA Disability Rating

Last updated 2026-05-22 · Source: 38 CFR 4.124a

TL;DR. Traumatic brain injury residuals are rated under DC 8045 using a unique 10-facet evaluation system. Each facet (memory, judgment, social interaction, motor activity, etc.) is scored 0–3 for severity. The OVERALL rating is set by the HIGHEST single facet score — not by averaging. Brackets: 0/10/40/70/100%. Mild TBI can rate above 10% if any single facet shows moderate or severe impairment. Combat veterans with blast exposure (Iraq, Afghanistan) qualify under the PACT Act for relaxed evidentiary requirements. Secondary mental-health claims (depression, anxiety, PTSD) are common and well-supported.

What TBI is in VA disability terms

Traumatic brain injury is acute or chronic brain dysfunction resulting from external mechanical force — impact, blast, penetrating injury, or sudden acceleration/deceleration. In VA practice, TBI ratings cover the long-term RESIDUALS of the injury, not the acute injury itself. A veteran injured in 2007 who has chronic memory problems, headaches, and irritability in 2026 is rated for those residuals under DC 8045.

The VA distinguishes among three levels of acute TBI severity (mild, moderate, severe) but the rating system applies the same 10-facet framework to all three. What differs is the typical residuals: mild TBI often produces subjective symptoms (headache, fatigue, mood changes) without obvious neurological deficits; moderate and severe TBI more often show measurable cognitive and motor impairment.

Blast TBI is increasingly recognized. Post-9/11 combat veterans exposed to IED detonations or repeated controlled detonations during training have elevated rates of TBI residuals even without single-event impact injury. The PACT Act of 2022 expanded presumptive service connection for several TBI-related conditions.

How the VA rates TBI (DC 8045)

DC 8045 is unique in the VA schedule. Instead of a traditional severity-based bracket system, it uses a 10-facet evaluation. Each facet is independently scored 0/1/2/3 for severity:

FacetWhat it covers
Memory, attention, concentration, executive functionsWorking memory, sustained attention, planning, problem-solving.
JudgmentDecision-making, risk assessment, financial competence.
Social interactionAppropriateness of behavior in social settings.
OrientationAwareness of time, place, person, situation.
Motor activityStrength, coordination, fine motor control.
Visual-spatial orientationNavigation, spatial reasoning, recognizing locations.
Subjective symptomsHeadaches, dizziness, fatigue, insomnia, tinnitus.
Neurobehavioral effectsIrritability, impulsivity, aggression, mood lability.
CommunicationSpeech, language comprehension and production.
ConsciousnessLevel of arousal, alertness; seizures, syncope.

The score for each facet maps to an overall rating bracket:

Highest facet scoreRating
0 (no impairment in any facet)0%
1 (mild impairment in at least one facet)10%
2 (moderate impairment in at least one facet)40%
3 (severe impairment in at least one facet)70%
Total impairment in any facet100%

Key features of this system:

Service-connection paths for TBI

Direct service connection

Documented in-service injury is the standard path. Evidence types:

Even without specific STR mentions of the head injury, a credible narrative of the in-service event combined with current TBI residuals and a nexus opinion can win on direct connection. The VA recognizes that mild TBI was historically under-diagnosed (especially pre-2007 deployments) and accepts retrospective documentation.

Blast exposure — PACT Act presumption

The PACT Act of 2022 expanded presumptive service connection for certain conditions associated with toxic exposure including airborne hazards. While TBI itself is not a PACT Act presumptive, blast exposure documentation supports TBI claims for post-9/11 combat veterans. Veterans with documented IED exposure, controlled detonation training (range cadre, EOD, breachers), or sustained mortar/rocket attack exposure have stronger TBI claims.

Secondary service connection

TBI can be secondary to another service-connected condition — for instance, TBI residuals from a service-connected fall caused by a knee giving out, or post-anoxic encephalopathy from a service-connected cardiac event. Less common than direct TBI claims but viable in the right facts.

Evidence the VA looks for

The TBI C&P exam

The TBI C&P exam is one of the most thorough in the VA system. It typically runs 60–120 minutes and uses DBQ 21-0960C-10 (Initial Evaluation of Residuals of Traumatic Brain Injury). The examiner:

For moderate/severe TBI cases, a separate neuropsychological evaluation may be ordered. This is a longer, more detailed cognitive testing battery conducted by a neuropsychologist.

Preparation tips:

  1. Bring records of every TBI-related symptom you've experienced since the injury. Memory issues, headaches, irritability, sleep problems, sensitivity to light/noise.
  2. Bring a family member or close friend who can describe behavioral changes you may not perceive (anosognosia — lack of awareness of one's own cognitive deficits — is common in TBI).
  3. Read DBQ 21-0960C-10 to understand the facet structure.
  4. If you have specific deficits, document them in advance (e.g., a log of times you've gotten lost driving familiar routes for visual-spatial impairment).
  5. Be honest. Validity testing is part of neuropsychological evaluations.

Common secondary conditions FROM TBI

Common rating pitfalls

  1. Under-reporting cognitive symptoms at the C&P exam. The 10-facet system rewards specific impairment documentation. Be specific about memory lapses, attention failures, social misjudgments — ideally with concrete examples.
  2. Filing TBI without secondary mental-health claims. Post-TBI depression and anxiety are well-supported secondaries that can raise the combined rating significantly.
  3. Confusing subjective symptoms with discrete conditions. Headaches under DC 8045's subjective-symptoms facet count differently than under DC 8100 (migraine). If you have prostrating migraine attacks, file BOTH a TBI claim AND a migraine claim — they rate separately.
  4. Missing the 70% bracket. A single severe facet (e.g., severe executive dysfunction preventing independent work) qualifies the entire TBI rating for 70%, even if other facets are mild. The bracket boundary is sharp.
  5. Not pursuing TDIU. 70% TBI veterans who cannot maintain substantially gainful employment due to cognitive or behavioral deficits qualify for TDIU at the 100% rate.

Worked example

Veteran: post-9/11 Army, infantry MOS, 2 deployments to Afghanistan. Documented IED exposure 2011; concussion treated at Bagram. Current: chronic headaches 3x/week (prostrating), executive function difficulty, irritability, mild memory loss. Spouse, 2 children.

  • TBI rating: Severe in neurobehavioral effects facet (irritability with periods of aggression preventing employment) = 70%.
  • Migraines (separate DC 8100): 30% (prostrating attacks averaging once per month over the past several months).
  • Combined: 70 + 30 × 0.30 = 79 → rounded 80%.
  • 2026 monthly compensation with spouse + 2 children: $1,995.01 + $169.70 + 2 × $149.45 = $2,463.61/mo.
  • If TDIU granted (cannot maintain SGE due to TBI residuals): jumps to 100%: $3,737.85 + $212.13 + 2 × $186.81 = $4,323.60/mo.

Annual at 80%: $29,563. With TDIU: $51,883. The TDIU upgrade adds $22,320/year.

Calculate your TBI-inclusive combined rating →

Sources cited in this article

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