VA Disability Calculator2026 rates · real VA math · bilateral factor

Tap where it hurts. We’ll combine your ratings the way the VA actually does and show what it pays — free, no signup.

How VA Disability Math Works

Why isn't my combined rating just the sum of my ratings?

The VA uses "whole person theory" (38 CFR 4.25): each rating applies to the part of you that is still healthy, not to 100%. A 50% rating plus another 50% rating combines to 75% — the second 50% only applies to the remaining half — which rounds to 80%, not 100%.

What is the bilateral factor?

When you have rated conditions in both arms or both legs (for example, both knees), the VA combines those ratings and adds an extra 10% of that combined value before finishing the math (38 CFR 4.26). Our calculator applies it automatically when you tag conditions to paired extremities.

How much does the VA pay in 2026?

The 2026 rates (effective December 1, 2025, after the 2.8% COLA) range from $180.42/month at 10% to $3,938.58/month at 100% for a veteran alone — more with a spouse, children, or dependent parents. All VA disability compensation is tax-free.

Why does my combined rating round down?

The VA rounds the exact combined value to the nearest 10%. Values ending in 5 round up (65% becomes 70%) but everything below rounds down (64% becomes 60%). Getting from 64 to 65 by adding one more ratable condition can be worth hundreds of dollars per month — that's why finding every claimable condition matters.

Can my rating be higher than this calculator shows?

Often, yes. Most veterans underclaim: secondary conditions (like radiculopathy from a bad back, or sleep apnea secondary to PTSD), PACT Act presumptives, and increases on underrated conditions are commonly missed. This calculator only combines what you enter — a free Valor Rating account analyzes your records and story to find what you're missing.

Want the full picture? Read how the VA rates conditions in our free Knowledge Center.