The most common misconception in veterans benefits is that a PTSD claim requires combat documentation. It doesn't. Federal law provides multiple pathways to establish PTSD service connection when traditional military records are incomplete, classified, or simply never existed.
VA claims for PTSD are governed by 38 CFR 3.304(f), which defines the evidentiary requirements for different categories of stressors. The regulations distinguish between:
Each pathway has different evidentiary rules. The absence of combat records is most relevant to the first pathway and least relevant to the others.
Military records are famously incomplete. The 1973 National Personnel Records Center fire destroyed millions of Army and Air Force records. Classified missions by definition leave no accessible paper trail. Units operating in support roles near combat zones often generated minimal documentation of individual exposures.
None of this defeats a PTSD claim. It shifts the evidentiary strategy.
Your own statement, submitted on VA Form 21-4138 or as a lay statement, is evidence. The VA is legally required to consider it. A well-crafted personal statement describing the in-service stressor event, its context, and the onset of PTSD symptoms is the foundation of a no-records claim.
The statement should include:
Vagueness undermines credibility. Specificity, even without supporting documents, is more persuasive.
Fellow service members who witnessed the stressor event, witnessed your symptoms, or can corroborate your service history can submit statements on VA Form 21-10210. These are called "buddy statements" and they carry real evidentiary weight, particularly when military records are thin.
A buddy statement from someone in your unit who was present during the stressor event is often the most powerful corroborating evidence available.
Military records aren't the only corroboration. Consider:
FOIA requests to the relevant service branch or to the National Archives can surface records that weren't in your official file.
Under 38 CFR 3.304(f)(3), PTSD can be service-connected based on a fear of hostile military or terrorist activity if:
This is a lower evidentiary bar than combat PTSD. It's specifically designed for veterans who served in environments with exposure to potential threat without necessarily seeing direct combat.
PTSD from training accidents, motor vehicle accidents during service, witnessing traumatic events as a first responder role in the military, or other non-combat trauma can be service-connected under the general stressor framework. The evidentiary requirement is that the stressor event is corroborated by service records or other credible evidence.
For these claims, any documentary evidence of the event (accident reports, incident documentation, medical records from the time) strengthens the case substantially.
At the C&P examination, the examiner will assess:
You don't need a combat action ribbon. You need a credible account of a traumatic in-service event and clinical evidence of PTSD. Those are different bars, and they're achievable through the evidence strategies described above.
A complete no-records claim package typically includes:
For more on what makes a nexus opinion effective, see PTSD nexus letters: what separates a strong one from a weak one. For veterans whose stressor involves military sexual trauma, see MST claims: evidence strategies that actually work.
Flat Rate Nexus offers physician-signed nexus opinions for veterans whose claims lack traditional documentation. Educational resources, including a free C&P exam preparation tool, are available at flatratenexus.com/ptsd.html.
Thinking about your own claim? Every nexus letter we write goes through a full physician record review, cites peer-reviewed research, and is built around the actual evidence in your case.
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