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Your Members Area

Everything you need to maximize your VA benefits is right here. Work through the guides at your own pace, check off your action items, and track your progress toward your rating.

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Guides
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Your Benefits Journey

Work through these guides in order β€” from filing your first claim all the way to maximizing every dollar. Each phase builds on the last. Check them off as you go.

PHASE 1
Getting Started β€” File Your Claim
1

Pre-Discharge Roadmap

Still in uniform or separating soon? Start here. Every step to file before separation day β€” BDD claim, medical records, what to document and when.

2

Already Separated β€” What Now?

Already out and haven't filed, got denied, or rated too low? This is your roadmap. Every step from pulling your records to submitting your claim.

3

VA Forms Quick Reference

Every VA form you need β€” 21-526EZ, 21-0781, 21-4142, 21-686c and 17 more β€” with what each does, when to use it, and direct links to file.

4

VA Form Examples β€” Filled Out

All 20 key VA forms filled out with real examples so you know exactly what goes in each field. Never guess what the VA wants to see again.

PHASE 2
Building Your Evidence
5

Condition Rating Breakdown

What each rating percentage looks like for the most common conditions β€” PTSD, back, knee, TBI and more. Know exactly what evidence supports each tier before you file.

6

Nexus Letter β€” Template & Guide

The exact "at least as likely as not" language the VA requires. How to find a provider, what to give them, and what a strong nexus letter must include to stick.

7

Buddy Statement Guide + Sample

Who to ask, exactly what they need to say, and a real example showing how a powerful buddy statement is structured to actually move the needle on your claim.

8

Symptom Journal & Document Templates

Daily symptom tracker, personal statement template, condition summary, and DBQ rebuttal β€” every document you need to build a claim that wins.

PHASE 3
The C&P Exam & Decision
9

C&P Exam Role Play & Prep

The most complete C&P prep guide available. Every condition, every examiner question, weak vs strong answers, rating criteria from 38 CFR, and a day-of checklist. Read this before your exam β€” no exceptions.

10

Understanding Your Rating Decision Letter

Plain English breakdown of every section of your VA decision letter β€” what each part means, red flags to catch, how to spot appeal opportunities, and exactly what to do next.

PHASE 4
Increasing Your Rating
11

Secondary Conditions β€” Finding Hidden Money

Most veterans have 3–6 unclaimed secondaries worth $300–$800/month each. Full condition maps for PTSD, MSK, sleep apnea, TBI, and more β€” plus how to get the nexus letter that makes it stick.

12

TDIU β€” 100% Pay at a Lower Rating

If your disabilities prevent you from working, you can receive 100% pay even at 70%. That's $2,021 more per month. Eligibility, exact 2026 rates, how to apply, and how to protect it.

PHASE 5
Maximize Every Dollar
13

VR&E Maximizer β€” Chapter 31

No tuition cap, monthly housing stipend, free laptop, books, business grants. Most veterans leave $20,000+ on the table. Full guide to getting every dollar VR&E covers.

14

State-by-State Benefits Guide

All 50 states β€” every property tax exemption, tuition waiver, vehicle benefit, hunting & fishing license, and employment preference your rating unlocks. Direct links and phone numbers for every benefit.

15

2026 BAH Calculator

Find your Basic Allowance for Housing by duty station ZIP, pay grade, and dependency status. Use this to compare VR&E school stipends and plan your housing before a PCS.

Guides & Resources

Work through these in order β€” from filing your first claim to maximizing every dollar you've earned.

PHASE 1
Getting Started β€” File Your Claim
1

Pre-Discharge Roadmap

Still in uniform? Start here. Every step to file before separation day β€” BDD claim, records, and what to document before you leave.

2

Already Separated β€” What Now?

Already out and haven't filed or rated too low? Every step from pulling records to submitting your claim.

3

VA Forms Quick Reference

Every VA form you'll need β€” what each does, when to use it, direct links to file.

4

VA Form Examples β€” Filled Out

All 20 key VA forms filled out with real examples so you know exactly what goes in each field.

PHASE 2
Building Your Evidence
5

Condition Rating Breakdown

What each rating % looks like for the most common conditions β€” know what evidence supports each tier before you file.

6

Nexus Letter β€” Template & Guide

The exact "at least as likely as not" language the VA requires. How to find a provider and what they need to write.

7

Buddy Statement Guide + Sample

Who to ask, what they need to say, and a real example of a powerful buddy statement that moves the needle.

8

Symptom Journal & Document Templates

Daily tracker, personal statement, condition summary, and DBQ rebuttal β€” every document to build a winning claim.

PHASE 3
The C&P Exam & Decision
9

C&P Exam Role Play & Prep

Every condition, every examiner question, weak vs strong answers, rating criteria, and a day-of checklist. Read before your exam β€” no exceptions.

10

Understanding Your Rating Decision Letter

Plain English breakdown of your VA decision letter β€” what it means, red flags, appeal opportunities, and what to do next.

PHASE 4
Increasing Your Rating
11

Secondary Conditions β€” Finding Hidden Money

3–6 unclaimed secondaries worth $300–$800/month each. Full maps for PTSD, MSK, sleep apnea, TBI, and more plus the nexus letter strategy.

12

TDIU β€” 100% Pay at a Lower Rating

Can't maintain employment? You may qualify for 100% pay at 70%. $2,021 more per month β€” eligibility, rates, how to apply, and how to protect it.

PHASE 5
Maximize Every Dollar
13

VR&E Maximizer β€” Chapter 31

No tuition cap, housing stipend, free laptop, business grants. Most veterans leave $20,000+ on the table. Every dollar VR&E covers.

14

State-by-State Benefits Guide

All 50 states β€” property tax, tuition waivers, vehicle benefits, hunting & fishing. Direct links and phone numbers for every benefit.

15

2026 BAH Calculator

Find your housing allowance by ZIP, pay grade, and dependency status. Compare VR&E school stipends before you enroll.

C&P Exam Preparation Guide

What the C&P Exam Actually Is

The Compensation & Pension exam is conducted by a VA examiner β€” sometimes a VA employee, sometimes a contractor. They are evaluating one thing: how much your service-connected conditions affect your ability to work and maintain relationships. This is called your "occupational and social impairment" level. Their report directly determines your rating percentage.

The #1 Mistake Veterans Make

Veterans are trained to push through. Don't do that here. If you say "I'm managing okay" when you're actually struggling, the examiner writes "managing okay" and rates you accordingly. Describe your worst days β€” not your best.

Before your exam: Write down 3–5 of your worst recent episodes in detail. What happened, how long it lasted, and exactly how it affected your work, family, or daily routine. Bring that list with you.

How to Describe Your Symptoms

  • Connect every symptom to work or relationships β€” "I was written up twice for angry outbursts" not "I get angry sometimes"
  • Mention every symptom β€” nightmares, panic attacks, memory problems, isolation, hypervigilance, all of it
  • Give frequency and severity β€” "3 panic attacks a week, each lasting 20–30 minutes"
  • Describe the real-world impact β€” missed work, relationship strain, daily tasks you can no longer do

What to Bring

  • A printed 1-page symptom summary with every condition, frequency, severity (1–10), and impact
  • Copies of your treatment records and any buddy statements
  • Your nexus letter if you have one
  • Your symptom journal if you've been keeping one

After the Exam

Request a copy of the DBQ (Disability Benefits Questionnaire) through your VA.gov account. If the examiner wrote "mild" when your symptoms are severe, you can submit a rebuttal before the VA issues its rating decision. This is a critical step most veterans miss.

Partnership members: Book a C&P exam role-play session with your coach before your exam date. We'll simulate the examiner's questions for your specific conditions.

Nexus Letter Template & Guide

What a Nexus Letter Is

A nexus letter is a written medical opinion from a qualified provider that directly connects your condition to your military service. It acts as a bridge between your diagnosis and your time in service. Without it, the VA may deny your claim even if your condition is severe.

The Required Legal Language

The letter must state that your condition is "at least as likely as not" connected to your service. This is the specific language the VA requires β€” a 50% or greater chance of connection. Your provider must use these exact words.

What a Strong Nexus Letter Includes

  • Review of your complete service records and medical history
  • The specific "at least as likely as not" opinion language
  • Explanation of how your service caused or worsened your condition
  • Citation of medical research supporting the connection
  • Full credentials of the provider who wrote it
  • Provider's signature and date

Template Opening

"It is my professional medical opinion that [CONDITION] is at least as likely as not caused by or a result of [VETERAN'S NAME]'s military service. This opinion is based on my review of [his/her] service records, medical history, and current examination..."

Where to Find a Provider

  • Your current VA treating physician β€” ask them directly
  • Private mental health or medical providers familiar with VA claims
  • Telehealth nexus letter services (search "VA nexus letter provider")

Buddy Statement Guide + Sample

What a Buddy Statement Is

A buddy statement (VA Form 21-10210) is a written statement from someone who can describe your condition and its impact on your daily life β€” from their firsthand perspective. The VA calls these "lay statements" and they carry real weight when written correctly.

Who Should Write One

  • Spouse or partner β€” can describe daily struggles, mood changes, relationship impact
  • Family member β€” someone who sees you regularly
  • Close friend β€” especially one who knew you before and after service
  • Former supervisor or coworker β€” can speak to work performance impact
  • Fellow veteran who served with you β€” can corroborate in-service events

What It Needs to Say

  • How they know you and for how long
  • Specific behaviors or symptoms they have personally witnessed
  • How your condition has changed since service
  • Real examples β€” not general statements like "he seems sad"
  • Impact on your work, relationships, and daily functioning

Sample Statement Opening

"My name is [NAME] and I am the [spouse/friend/coworker] of [VETERAN NAME]. I have known [him/her] for [X] years. I am writing this statement to describe what I have personally witnessed regarding [his/her] condition since [his/her] return from military service..."

VR&E / Chapter 31 Guide

What VR&E Is

Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment (VR&E), also known as Chapter 31, is a VA program that provides education, training, and support to veterans whose service-connected disabilities create a barrier to employment. It is one of the most underused β€” and most valuable β€” VA programs available.

Who Qualifies

  • Service-connected disability rating of at least 20%
  • VA determines you have an "employment handicap" from your disability
  • At 10% you may qualify if VA determines a "serious employment handicap"
  • Must apply within 12 years of discharge (exceptions exist)

The 5 VR&E Tracks

  • Reemployment β€” return to your previous employer
  • Rapid Access to Employment β€” quick job placement with minimal training
  • Self-Employment β€” start or expand your own business
  • Employment Through Long-Term Services β€” college, trade school, or certification
  • Independent Living β€” for veterans who cannot work at all

VR&E vs GI Bill β€” Which is Better?

VR&E covers full tuition at any school with no cap, pays for books and supplies, and provides a monthly housing stipend (BAH equivalent). The GI Bill has tuition caps and pays a lower housing rate. For most veterans pursuing a 4-year degree, VR&E pays significantly more.

How to Frame Your Intake Appointment

At your first VR&E appointment, your counselor will determine your "employment handicap." Be specific about how your disability affects your ability to find and keep suitable work. Give examples β€” missed days, performance issues, inability to sit/stand, anxiety in workplaces. The more specific you are, the stronger your eligibility case.

Condition Rating Breakdown

How the VA Rates Mental Health Conditions

All mental health conditions are rated under the same formula β€” 38 CFR Β§ 4.130. Whether it's PTSD, depression, anxiety, or bipolar disorder, the VA uses one scale based on your level of occupational and social impairment.

Rating Levels & What They Mean

  • 0% β€” Diagnosed but symptoms don't interfere with work or daily life. Still service-connected and eligible for free VA healthcare.
  • 10% β€” Mild symptoms that appear mainly under stress. Job performance slightly affected during high-stress periods.
  • 30% β€” Occasional impairment. Depressed mood, anxiety, sleep problems, mild memory issues affecting work and social life.
  • 50% β€” Reduced reliability. Panic attacks, poor judgment, difficulty with complex tasks, strained relationships.
  • 70% β€” Deficiencies in most areas. Suicidal ideation, near-constant depression or panic, poor impulse control, inability to maintain relationships.
  • 100% β€” Total impairment. Cannot work or function socially. Persistent hallucinations, dangerous behavior, severe memory loss.

The Key Evidence Rule

The VA rates you based on your worst days β€” not your best. Document your worst episodes in detail. Frequency, severity, and real-world impact are everything. A symptom journal used consistently over 60–90 days before your C&P exam builds powerful evidence.

Secondary Conditions Map

What a Secondary Condition Is

A secondary condition is one that was caused or aggravated by a service-connected condition you already have. You can file for secondary conditions and receive additional compensation β€” many veterans leave thousands of dollars on the table by not claiming them.

Common Secondary Connections

  • PTSD β†’ Sleep Apnea β€” medications cause weight gain, sleep disturbances trigger apnea. Common rating: 50%
  • PTSD β†’ Migraines β€” chronic stress and hypervigilance trigger migraine episodes. Common rating: 30–50%
  • PTSD/Anxiety β†’ GERD β€” stress directly affects stomach acid production. Common rating: 10–30%
  • PTSD/Anxiety β†’ Hypertension β€” chronic stress response raises blood pressure. Common rating: 10–20%
  • PTSD/Depression β†’ Erectile Dysfunction β€” both the condition and medications cause ED. Rating: 0% with SMC-K
  • Back Pain β†’ Hip/Knee Issues β€” altered gait from back pain strains joints. Common rating: 10–20%
  • Hearing Loss β†’ Tinnitus β€” almost always connected. Rating: 10%

How to File a Secondary Claim

File a new claim on VA.gov for each secondary condition. In your statement, write: "This condition is secondary to my service-connected [primary condition]." A nexus letter from your provider strengthens the connection significantly.

State Benefits Reference Guide

Benefits Open Up at Every Rating Level

Your VA rating doesn't just affect your federal compensation β€” it also unlocks a range of state-level benefits that vary by state. Most veterans never claim them. Check your state's veterans affairs website for the most current eligibility rules.

Common Benefits by Rating Tier

  • 10%+ β€” Disabled veteran license plates, state park fee waivers, hunting/fishing license discounts, state employment preference points
  • 30%+ β€” Expanded property tax relief (state dependent), additional employment preferences, business program access
  • 50%+ β€” Significant property tax exemptions, free state park access, tuition assistance programs at public colleges (many states)
  • 70%+ β€” Larger property tax exemptions, full tuition waivers at public colleges (Texas Hazelwood, Florida, California, Virginia, and others)
  • 100% / P&T β€” Full homestead property tax exemption (can save $5,000–$15,000+ per year), free tuition transferable to dependents in many states, free vehicle registration, free hunting/fishing

Use the Interactive Tool

The main Service 2 Success website has a state-by-state benefits lookup tool. Go to the main site and select your state to see the specific benefits available at each rating tier.

Symptom Journal Template

Why You Need a Symptom Journal

The VA rates you based on your worst days. A symptom journal kept consistently over 60–90 days before your C&P exam builds a powerful evidence record that shows frequency, severity, and real-world impact over time β€” not just one day's snapshot.

Daily Entry Template

Date: ___________
Symptoms today: (list each one)
Severity (1–10): ___
Duration: ___
Trigger (if known): ___
Impact on work/daily life: ___
Sleep quality (1–10): ___
Notable events: ___

Tips for Effective Journaling

  • Write every day β€” even if it's just "mild day, 3/10 anxiety, worked full shift"
  • Be specific β€” "couldn't leave the house" beats "felt bad"
  • Record missed work, cancelled plans, and relationship incidents
  • Note any medications taken and whether they helped
  • If you have a really bad day β€” write it in detail immediately, don't wait

How to Use It at Your C&P Exam

Bring a printed copy of your journal or a summary page to your C&P exam. Hand it to the examiner at the start. It shows you take your condition seriously and gives them documented evidence beyond your verbal account.

My Action Checklist

Work through these in order. Check each one off as you complete it.

Phase 1 β€” Foundation

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βœ“

Read the C&P Exam Preparation Guide

This is the most important guide β€” read it before anything else.

βœ“

Start your symptom journal

Begin tracking daily symptoms using the journal template. Do this for 60–90 days before your exam.

βœ“

List all your conditions β€” rated and unrated

Write down every condition you have, whether you've filed for it or not. Include secondary conditions.

βœ“

Review your Secondary Conditions Map

Identify which of your conditions may be secondary to your primary service-connected condition.

βœ“

Enroll in VA healthcare if not already enrolled

Go to va.gov/health-care/apply. This builds your treatment record before your C&P exam.

Phase 2 β€” Evidence Building

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βœ“

Request a nexus letter from your provider

Ask your treating physician or a qualified provider to write a nexus letter connecting your conditions to service.

βœ“

Identify 2–3 people to write buddy statements

Reach out to spouse, family, friends, or former coworkers who can describe your condition firsthand.

βœ“

Collect buddy statements

Send them the buddy statement guide and template. Give them 2 weeks to complete it.

βœ“

Request your service records and VA file

Order through milConnect or the National Archives. Review for any in-service medical documentation.

βœ“

File your claim or rating increase on VA.gov

Submit VA Form 21-526EZ online at va.gov. List all conditions including secondary claims.

Phase 3 β€” Exam Preparation

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βœ“

Write your worst-day descriptions

Write out 3–5 of your worst recent episodes in detail. Bring this to your C&P exam.

βœ“

Create your 1-page condition summary

List every symptom, frequency, severity (1–10), and real-world impact on one page to hand to the examiner.

βœ“

Print all your documentation

Treatment records, buddy statements, nexus letter, symptom journal, condition summary. Bring copies to the exam.

βœ“

Attend your C&P exam

Describe your worst days. Mention every symptom. Connect everything to your ability to work and maintain relationships.

βœ“

Request your DBQ exam report

After the exam, get the examiner's report through VA.gov. Review it for errors and submit a rebuttal if needed.

Phase 4 β€” After Your Rating

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βœ“

Review your rating decision letter carefully

Understand exactly what was rated, at what percentage, and why. Note any denied conditions.

βœ“

Check your state benefits

Use the State Benefits tool on the main site to see every benefit your new rating unlocks in your state.

βœ“

Evaluate VR&E eligibility

If you're at 20%+ and have an employment barrier from your disability, apply for VR&E at va.gov.

βœ“

Consider appeal or increase options

If any conditions were denied or rated lower than expected, evaluate Supplemental Claim, Higher-Level Review, or Board of Veterans' Appeals.

My Coach

Your coach is with you every step of the way until your rating decision arrives.

S2S

Service 2 Success Coach

Partnership member β€” unlimited sessions until rating decision

What to Prepare Before Each Call

  • β†’ Write down your top 3 questions or concerns before each session
  • β†’ Note any VA letters, decisions, or exam appointments you've received
  • β†’ Update your symptom journal so your coach can review recent entries
  • β†’ Send any documents for review to joinservice2success@gmail.com 24 hrs before your call