Sleep apnea is one of the most commonly claimed VA disability conditions — and one of the most frequently under-rated. Many veterans receive a 0% rating when their condition qualifies for 50%. Here's exactly how the VA rates sleep apnea in 2026, what the CPAP requirement means for your rating, and the secondary connections that can significantly boost your overall combined rating.

⚡ 2026 Sleep Apnea Fast Facts

VA rates sleep apnea under Diagnostic Code 6847. A veteran requiring a CPAP machine receives a 50% rating — worth $1,075.16/month tax-free for a single veteran. Sleep apnea is one of the easiest conditions to get service connected as secondary to PTSD, sinusitis, or rhinitis.

How the VA Rates Sleep Apnea (Diagnostic Code 6847)

RatingCriteriaMonthly Pay (Alone)
0%Asymptomatic but with documented sleep disorder breathing$0 (establishes service connection)
30%Persistent daytime hypersomnolence — excessive sleepiness during the day despite treatment$524.31
50%Requires use of a breathing assistance device such as CPAP, BiPAP, or APAP$1,075.16
100%Chronic respiratory failure with carbon dioxide retention, cor pulmonale, or requires tracheotomy$3,737.85

The CPAP Requirement — The Most Important Factor

If your doctor has prescribed a CPAP, BiPAP, or APAP machine to treat your sleep apnea, you qualify for a 50% rating. This is the most common sleep apnea rating for veterans. The key is documentation — your medical records must clearly show the prescription for the breathing assistance device.

Many veterans use their CPAP inconsistently or stop using it. This does not lower your rating — the VA rates based on whether you require the device, not whether you consistently use it. Make sure your records show the prescription remains active.

Sleep Apnea Secondary to PTSD — The Most Valuable Connection

Sleep apnea can be service connected as secondary to PTSD, meaning you don't need to prove the sleep apnea itself happened in service — only that your service-connected PTSD caused or worsened it. This is scientifically supported: PTSD disrupts sleep architecture, increases muscle tension, and is strongly linked to obstructive sleep apnea development.

To establish this secondary connection, you need a nexus letter from a physician stating it is "at least as likely as not" that your PTSD caused or aggravated your sleep apnea. See our complete nexus letter guide for how to get one.

Also see our guide on sleep apnea secondary to PTSD for the full secondary claim process.

Other Secondary Connections for Sleep Apnea

2026 Pay Rates for Sleep Apnea with Dependents

RatingAloneWith SpouseWith Spouse + 1 Child
50%$1,075.16$1,175.16$1,251.16
30%$524.31$586.31$627.31

Use our VA pay calculator to see your exact monthly payment based on your rating and dependent situation.

What to Bring to Your C&P Exam

New VA Rules for Sleep Apnea — File Now

The VA has proposed changes to how sleep apnea is rated — specifically whether CPAP use alone still qualifies for 50%. These proposed changes have not taken full effect as of 2026, but the smart move is to file your claim under current rules immediately to lock in your rating before any changes are finalized.

Bottom Line

If you have a diagnosed sleep apnea condition and a CPAP prescription, you should be rated at 50% — worth over $1,000/month tax-free. If you have PTSD, sinusitis, or TBI that's already service connected, sleep apnea as a secondary condition is one of the most achievable rating increases available. File the claim and document the connection.

Calculate Your Combined Rating

See how adding a 50% sleep apnea rating affects your total combined rating and monthly pay.

Use Combined Rating Calculator →