Paralysis of — VA Rating Criteria (38 CFR DC 8211)
The VA rates Paralysis of under 38 CFR § 4.124a, Diagnostic Code 8211, from 10% to 30% based on the frequency and functional severity of symptoms. The maximum 30% rating requires Complete. Related conditions in the Neurological body system share this rating framework.
Also available: View full condition details for Paralysis of
Rating schedule — DC 8211 at a glance
- Minimum rating
- 10%
- Maximum rating
- 30%
- Rating tiers
- 3
- CFR section
- § 4.124a
- Body system
- Neurological
- Secondary conditions
- 0
Lowest schedular rating available
TDIU may raise effective compensation to 100%
10%, 20%, 30%
Part 4 rating schedule
None mapped
What are the VA rating criteria for Paralysis of?
Incomplete, moderate
Incomplete, severe
Complete
“Incomplete, severe”
How does the VA rate Neurological conditions?
Common Questions About Paralysis of VA Ratings
What is the VA disability rating for Paralysis of?
The VA rates Paralysis of under Diagnostic Code 8211 at the following tiers: 10%, 20%, 30%. The minimum 10% rating requires: Incomplete, moderate. The maximum 30% rating requires: Complete.
What is Diagnostic Code 8211?
Diagnostic Code 8211 is the VA rating identifier for Paralysis of within 38 CFR 38 CFR § 4.124a. It defines the specific symptom criteria and percentage thresholds a VA adjudicator uses to assign a disability rating. The diagnostic code is listed on a veteran's rating decision letter.
What is the highest rating for Paralysis of?
The highest schedular rating for Paralysis of under DC 8211 is 30%. This tier requires: Complete. Veterans who cannot secure substantially gainful employment due to Paralysis of alone or in combination with other service-connected conditions may also qualify for TDIU at the 100% compensation rate under 38 CFR § 4.16.
What 38 CFR section governs Paralysis of ratings?
Paralysis of is rated under 38 CFR 38 CFR § 4.124a, Diagnostic Code 8211. This section is part of the Schedule for Rating Disabilities (38 CFR Part 4) and can be read in full at the eCFR website.
Which conditions are commonly secondary to Paralysis of?
Secondary conditions caused or aggravated by Paralysis of may be ratable under 38 CFR § 3.310. Veterans should work with a VSO or accredited claims agent to document the medical relationship.
What evidence supports a higher rating for Paralysis of?
The key evidence for Paralysis of depends on the body system. For neurological conditions, nerve conduction studies, EMG results, and clinical documentation of complete vs incomplete paralysis are critical for distinguishing between rating tiers. A nexus letter from a qualified medical professional is essential for contested claims.
Can Paralysis of qualify for TDIU?
Paralysis of maxes at 30%, below the single-disability TDIU threshold of 60%. However, combined with other service-connected disabilities totaling 70%+ (with one at 40%+), TDIU under § 4.16(a) may apply. Extraschedular TDIU under § 4.16(b) is available if Paralysis of alone prevents work regardless of the rating percentage.
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