Tinnitus Nexus Letters
The VA is proposing changes to tinnitus ratings in late 2026. If you haven't filed yet, now is the time. A board-certified physician reviews your records and writes your medical opinion letter. $400 flat rate.
Start My Nexus Letter$50 record review — applied toward your $400 letter.
File before VA rating changes take effect
- ▶The VA is considering eliminating standalone tinnitus ratings, currently rated under Diagnostic Code 6260 at a maximum of 10%.
- ▶A proposed rule change expected in late 2026 would fold tinnitus into hearing loss ratings, removing it as a standalone ratable condition.
- ▶Veterans with existing tinnitus ratings would likely be grandfathered in under current rules.
- ▶Veterans who have not yet filed could lose the ability to receive a standalone tinnitus rating entirely.
- ▶Filing now preserves your claim under the current rating schedule while standalone tinnitus ratings still exist.
Tinnitus is one of the most commonly service-connected conditions at the VA. The right evidence makes the difference between approval and denial.
Direct Service Connection
Noise exposure from your military occupational specialty, combat operations, weapons qualification, aircraft, heavy machinery, or shipboard operations. The DoD Duty MOS Noise Exposure Listing supports claims based on your MOS alone, even without a specific documented incident.
Combat Veterans: 38 USC §1154(b)
If you served in combat, your lay testimony about noise exposure is accepted as sufficient proof of the in-service event. Indicators include CIB, CAR, CAB, Purple Heart, or service in a designated combat zone. You do not need a specific audiogram or sick call record from service.
No In-Service Complaint? That's Normal.
The absence of a tinnitus complaint in your service treatment records does not defeat the claim. The Institute of Medicine specifically notes that delayed reporting of tinnitus is common among military personnel, and many veterans do not report symptoms until years after separation. (IOM, Noise and Military Service, 2006)
Audiogram Evidence
An audiogram showing high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss at 4000 to 6000 Hz is the classic noise-induced pattern. While not required for a tinnitus claim, this audiogram finding provides strong corroborating evidence that noise damage occurred during service and supports the connection to tinnitus.
The stronger your supporting evidence, the stronger the medical opinion we can write. Here is what we look for in your records.
- ✓Documentation of noise exposure: your MOS, combat indicators (CIB, CAR, CAB), flight crew status, artillery or armor assignment, or other duty-related noise exposure.
- ✓A current diagnosis or self-report of tinnitus. Tinnitus is unique in that it is often diagnosed based on the veteran's own report alone, as there is no objective test for it.
- ✓An audiogram showing a noise-induced pattern, particularly high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss at 4000 to 6000 Hz. Helpful but not required.
- ✓Medical literature supporting the connection between military noise exposure and tinnitus. We cite the Institute of Medicine's 2006 report, Noise and Military Service, in the letter.
- ✓Buddy statements from fellow service members who can attest to the noise environment during your service, particularly if your STRs are limited.
You do not need all five of these elements. In many tinnitus cases, your MOS and a current report of symptoms are enough to build a strong opinion. Upload what you have and we will assess your case.
The VA rates tinnitus under Diagnostic Code 6260. There is one rating level.
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| 10% | Recurrent tinnitus. This is the maximum schedular rating for tinnitus, whether it affects one ear or both. |
A tinnitus rating establishes service connection. That foundation supports secondary claims for conditions caused by chronic tinnitus.
Anxiety and Depression
Chronic auditory distress from tinnitus is well-documented as a cause of anxiety and depressive disorders. The constant ringing reduces quality of life and leads to emotional distress, social withdrawal, and difficulty concentrating. (Langguth B et al. Prog Brain Res. 2007)
Insomnia
Tinnitus is a recognized cause of sleep onset difficulty and sleep maintenance insomnia. The perception of constant noise makes falling asleep and staying asleep significantly harder, leading to chronic sleep deprivation. (Crönlein T et al. J Psychosom Res. 2007)
Migraines
Tinnitus and migraines share auditory-vestibular pathway dysfunction and central sensitization mechanisms. Veterans with service-connected tinnitus who develop migraines have a recognized secondary connection. (Langguth B, Elgoyhen AB. Expert Rev Neurother. 2012)
Real results from real veterans.
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