VA Disability Compensation is a tax-free monthly benefit paid to veterans who have a service-connected physical or mental health condition. Payments range from $180.42/month (10%) to $3,938.58/month (100%) based on your combined disability rating in 2026 (effective Dec 1, 2025). The benefit is for life and adjusts annually with cost-of-living increases.
⚡ Quick Eligibility Calculator
Check each row — all must be met to qualify. Hover a row for verification guidance.
| Requirement | You qualify if… | How to verify |
|---|---|---|
| Military service | Active duty, National Guard, or Reserve | DD-214 (Certificate of Release) |
| Service connection | At least 1 condition linked to military service | Service records, medical nexus letter |
| Current disability | Ongoing, diagnosable condition (not fully resolved) | VA Compensation & Pension (C&P) exam |
| Discharge character | Honorable, General (Under Honorable), or OTH in some cases | DD-214 Box 24 |
| No disqualifying offense | No statutory bar offenses (e.g., desertion, AWOL >180 days) | Character of discharge review if needed |
The 10% threshold above is for monthly cash payments. A 0% service-connected rating is a different — and still meaningful — outcome. Here's what it actually means:
- Service connection is permanently established. The VA has officially agreed your condition is related to your military service. You never have to prove that again.
- Future increases are easier. If your condition worsens, you file for a rating increase — not a new claim. Higher approval rates, faster processing.
- Free VA healthcare for that specific condition, regardless of your overall priority group.
- Foundation for secondary claims. A 0% back injury that later causes nerve damage? You claim radiculopathy as secondary — and that can rate 20–40%.
- Some state programs activate at any service-connected rating, including 0%. Check your state's veterans office for details.
- Counts toward TDIU in certain combined-rating edge cases.
Bottom line: a 0% rating is not a rejection. It is the VA acknowledging your condition is service-connected — which is the hardest part. Treat it as a foundation, not a ceiling.
New York-Specific Programs & Advantages
New York Veterans Benefits Beyond the Federal Programs
- New York State Higher Education Veterans' Tuition Award (VTA) — up to full SUNY/CUNY tuition
- Alternative Veterans' Exemption — property tax reduction (municipality must opt in)
- Veterans Homes at six locations across the state
- NY State Division of Veterans' Services — free legal, counseling, and claims assistance
Property Tax Note for New York Veterans
New York offers the Alternative Veterans' Exemption (reducing assessed property value by up to 15% for general veterans, or up to 25% for wartime/Cold War veterans with combat service), plus an additional 50% reduction for veterans with service-connected disabilities.
Who to Contact in New York
For VA Disability Compensation claims assistance in New York, contact the New York State Division of Veterans' Services (DVS). They provide free, accredited claims help to veterans at no cost.
Apply for the Alternative Veterans' Exemption with your local assessor's office by the applicable taxable status date. New York DVS county service officers provide free VA claims assistance.
How to Apply for VA Disability Compensation
Application Process
Processing time: 100–125 days average (simple claims); 1 year+ for complex or appealed claims
Apply online: VA.gov — VA Disability Compensation →
Required Documents Checklist
- DD-214 (service records)
- Medical records showing current diagnosis
- Buddy statements or lay evidence (optional but helpful)
- Private physician nexus letter
- VA Form 21-526EZ (Application for Disability Compensation)
Securely Store Your Records in the Benefit Bunker
Benefit Bunker is a Progressive Web App (PWA) — install it on your phone or computer for offline access. Store your DD-214, C&P exam results, rating decision letters, and VA correspondence directly in your Bunker. Available at your VA appointment even without Wi-Fi.
Add to Home Screen — Free, No Account →Frequently Asked Questions
What is the minimum disability rating to receive VA Disability Compensation in New York?
The minimum rating that results in monthly compensation is 10%. A 0% service-connected rating is possible — it acknowledges the service connection but does not pay monthly benefits. Veterans in New York file the same federal claim with the VA regional office, but some state-specific programs also activate at certain rating thresholds.
How long does a VA disability claim take to process in New York?
The VA's national average is 100–125 days for an initial decision. More complex claims or those requiring specialty C&P exams can take 6–18 months. Veterans in New York can track their claim at VA.gov or call 1-800-827-1000. Using a Veterans Service Organization (VSO) typically speeds the process.
What documents do I need to file a VA disability claim in New York?
You'll need your DD-214, medical records showing your current diagnosis, and VA Form 21-526EZ. A nexus letter from a private physician linking your condition to service is the single most powerful document you can add. Veterans in New York can get free filing assistance at New York State Division of Veterans' Services (DVS).