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Free Viability Check →A denial is not the end. The VA's appeals system provides multiple pathways to reverse an incorrect mental health claim decision, and the majority of denials happen for fixable reasons. Understanding what went wrong and choosing the right appeal track is the difference between years of frustration and a successful outcome.
Before choosing an appeal strategy, identify the specific reason for denial. The Rating Decision will include a reasons and bases section that explains exactly why the claim was denied. Common reasons include:
Each of these denial reasons has a distinct counter-strategy. Reading the Rating Decision carefully before responding is essential.
The Appeals Modernization Act (AMA), which took effect in February 2019, created three lanes for appealing VA decisions. These are not sequential; you choose the one that best fits your situation.
File a Supplemental Claim when you have new and relevant evidence that was not considered in the original decision.
New and relevant evidence for a mental health claim includes:
The Supplemental Claim lane is the most commonly appropriate first step for mental health denials where the denial was for lack of nexus or medical evidence. A physician-authored independent medical opinion submitted with a Supplemental Claim directly addresses the most common denial rationale.
A Higher-Level Review asks a senior VA adjudicator to review the same evidence and determine whether a clear and unmistakable error was made. No new evidence is permitted. Choose HLR when:
HLR includes an optional informal conference with the reviewing adjudicator, which can be valuable for identifying the specific error.
A BVA appeal takes your case to a Veterans Law Judge. Three options exist within BVA:
BVA is appropriate for complex claims, legal arguments about how regulations were applied, or cases with strong evidence that needs a thorough independent evaluation. BVA waits can be lengthy, but BVA decisions carry the weight of legal precedent and can produce retroactive awards.
If the denial cited a negative C&P opinion, a new independent medical opinion must directly and specifically rebut the examiner's reasoning. A generic nexus letter that restates the causal connection without addressing the examiner's specific objections will not reverse the decision.
The rebuttal nexus letter should:
See Anatomy of a Strong Mental Health Nexus Letter for the structural requirements.
The VA is obligated to provide an adequate examination. Courts have held that a C&P exam is inadequate when:
Requesting a new C&P exam based on inadequacy of the original is a legitimate and viable strategy. Submit evidence of the inadequacy alongside the appeal.
For Supplemental Claims, you can strengthen the case by documenting that your symptoms have worsened since the original decision, or that new medical understanding of your condition now supports the nexus that was previously denied.
Veterans who reverse mental health denials typically do so with a combination of:
For C&P exam preparation before any re-examination, see Mental Health C&P Exam Preparation.
If your mental health claim was denied and you're preparing a Supplemental Claim or BVA appeal, a physician-signed independent medical opinion that directly addresses the denial rationale is often the most impactful evidence you can add. Visit flatratenexus.com for a nexus letter grader, C&P exam prep tools, and information about physician-authored IMOs.
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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