Migraine Headaches
VA disability rating criteria for Migraine Headaches under Diagnostic Code 8100. The VA assigns ratings of 0%, 10%, 30%, 50% based on the severity and functional impact of your condition.
Rating Criteria
Less frequent attacks of migraine headaches. Characteristic prodromal, migraine, or postcoma phenomena are present with infrequent attacks that do not significantly interfere with daily activities.
Note: Migraines must be formally diagnosed and documented. The 0% non-compensable rating applies when migraines are infrequent and do not interfere significantly with functioning. Characteristic migraine features include prodrome, photophobia, phonophobia, nausea, and aura.
Characteristic prostrating attacks averaging one in 2 months over the last several months.
Note: "Prostrating" means incapacitating — the veteran must stop normal activity and rest. Frequency is key to the rating. Documentation of each migraine episode with dates, duration, and severity is essential for rating purposes.
Characteristic prostrating attacks averaging one in 1 month over the last several months.
Very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged attacks productive of severe economic inadaptability.
Note: "Severe economic inadaptability" is the regulatory standard for the 50% maximum rating — it means the migraines seriously impair the veteran's ability to maintain gainful employment. Veterans with 50% migraines may qualify for TDIU if they cannot work.
Secondary Conditions
4 known secondary conditions linked to Migraine Headaches
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