38 CFR § 4.252026 RatesLast verified: APR 22, 2026

Combined VA Disability Rating — 30% + 30%

Combining a 30% and 30% VA disability rating under 38 CFR § 4.25 results in a 50% combined rating, which pays $1,132.90/month ($13,595.00/year) in 2026 for a veteran without dependents. The VA uses whole-person theory — ratings do not add arithmetically.

First Rating

30%

Second Rating

30%

VA Combined

50%

$1,132.90/mo

“Disabilities will be evaluated on a combined rating from 0 to 100 percent, as provided in the rating schedule, by using the combined ratings table and rounding to the nearest 10 percent.”
— 38 CFR § 4.25, Combined Ratings Table

How is a 30% + 30% combined rating calculated?

The VA applies the whole-person formula: start with 30%, which uses 30 of 100 whole persons, leaving 70 remaining. The 30% disability is then applied to those 70 remaining persons:

Step 1: 30 + (100 − 30) × 30 / 100
Step 2: 30 + 70 × 30 / 100
Step 3: 30 + 21 = 51.0
Step 4 (round to nearest 10): 50%

The arithmetic sum would be 60%. The VA whole-person result is 50% — a difference of 10 percentage points. This gap grows as both ratings increase.

How much does a 50% VA disability rating pay monthly?

SituationMonthlyAnnual
Veteran alone$1,132.90$13,595.00
With spouse$1,241.90$14,902.80
Spouse + 1 child$1,322.90$15,874.80
Spouse + 2 children$1,497.84$17,974.08

All rates are tax-free under 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(4) and effective December 1, 2025.

What benefits do I get at 50%?

16 cumulative federal benefits available at 50%. See the full 50% compensation detail →

Service-Connected Status

Since 0%

VA Healthcare (Priority Group 5)

Since 0%

VA Home Loan Eligibility

Since 0%

Monthly Compensation

Since 10%

VA Home Loan Funding Fee Waiver

Since 10%

VA Healthcare (Priority Group 3)

Since 10%

VR&E Chapter 31

Since 10%

State Property Tax Benefits

Since 10%

VR&E Serious Employment Handicap

Since 20%

Dependent Compensation

Since 30%

VA Healthcare (Priority Group 2)

Since 30%

VA Dental (SC Conditions)

Since 30%

Auto/Adaptive Equipment Grant

Since 40%

TDIU Pathway (Combined)

Since 40%

VA Healthcare (Priority Group 1)

Unlocks at 50%

State Benefits Expansion

Unlocks at 50%

How can I reach a higher combined rating?

Because of whole-person math, adding a new condition has diminishing returns as your existing combined rating climbs. The most effective paths to a higher rating are:

  • Increase an existing condition

    If one of your current ratings has room to increase (e.g., from 30% to 50%), appealing that single rating often produces a larger combined increase than adding a new low-rated condition.

  • Establish secondary conditions

    Secondary conditions caused or aggravated by your primary service-connected disability are ratable on their own. PTSD, sleep apnea, hypertension, and joint conditions are common secondaries.

  • File for TDIU

    If your combined disabilities prevent substantially gainful employment, TDIU pays at the 100% rate regardless of your combined percentage under 38 CFR § 4.16.

Browse secondary condition connections →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the VA combined rating for 30% + 30%?

Combining a 30% and 30% VA disability rating under 38 CFR § 4.25 yields 50%. The VA uses whole-person theory: 30% is applied to 100 whole persons, leaving 70 remaining. The 30% is then applied to those 70 remaining persons (70 × 30% = 21), giving a combined raw value of 51, which rounds to 50%.

Is the combined rating just 30 + 30 = 60%? Why not?

No. The VA does not add ratings arithmetically. It applies the "whole person" theory: 30% is rated against 100%, leaving 70% remaining. The 30% disability is then rated against that 70% remainder — not the full 100%. This means two 50% disabilities combine to 75% (not 100%), and the result is always less than the arithmetic sum, unless one rating is 0%.

What does a 50% rating pay per month in 2026?

A 50% VA disability rating pays $1,132.90/month ($13,595.00/year) for a veteran without dependents in 2026. This compensation is tax-free under 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(4).

Is the combined VA rating system different from other federal disability systems?

Yes. The VA combined ratings table (38 CFR § 4.25) is unique to the Department of Veterans Affairs. Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), OPM FERS/CSRS disability, and DOD disability ratings use separate legal frameworks. A VA combined rating has no bearing on SSDI eligibility, and vice versa.

Can I qualify for TDIU with a 50% combined rating?

TDIU under 38 CFR § 4.16(a) requires a combined rating of 70% (with one disability at 40%+) or a single rating of 60%. At 50%, you would need additional service-connected conditions to qualify through the standard path. Extra-schedular TDIU under § 4.16(b) is available in exceptional cases.

What does 38 CFR § 4.25 say about rounding?

Section 4.25 states: "The combined value will be converted to the nearest degree divisible by 10, adjusting final values of 5 or more up and values less than 5 down." This means a raw combined value of 65 rounds to 70%, and a raw value of 64 rounds to 60%. The rounding step is the last step — it applies to the final combined value, not to intermediate calculations.

How is the 30% + 30% combined rating different from a single 50% rating?

For compensation purposes, the outcomes are identical — both pay the same monthly rate at 50%. However, the underlying individual ratings matter for TDIU eligibility (which looks at single-condition ratings), for SMC eligibility (which has specific rating requirements), and for future rating increases, since each condition can be rated independently on appeal.

Find What's Driving Your Combined Rating

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