When veterans look for support during their VA benefits journey, one phrase comes up again and again: “at least as likely as not.”
If you’ve seen this term and wondered what it means, or why it matters so much, you’re not alone. The phrase is a key part of how the VA reviews medical opinions. But it’s also one of the most misunderstood parts of the entire process.
This guide breaks the standard down in plain language so you can understand what clinicians do, what the medical evidence team does, and what this 50% probability really means for your documentation.
No legal advice. No guarantees. Just clear, accurate information.
What Is the “At Least As Likely As Not” Nexus Standard?
In the VA system, medical opinions often need to meet a specific probability level. The phrase “at least as likely as not” refers to a 50% or greater likelihood (≥ 50%) that a current condition may be connected to an event, injury, or exposure during service.
This standard doesn’t promise a VA outcome. Instead, it helps create a medically sound explanation that VA reviewers are allowed to consider when they evaluate all evidence together.
Why 50%?
The standard comes from federal statute and legal precedent, including 38 U.S.C. § 1110. In simple terms, if the medical and non-medical evidence is balanced, meaning it’s essentially a tie, the VA may give the benefit of that doubt.

Breaking Down the Three Probability Levels
Licensed medical professionals generally use one of three probability statements when writing a medical opinion:
| Probability Finding | Meaning | VA Standard |
| Less Likely Than Not | Below 50% (< 50%) | Does not meet the standard |
| At Least As Likely As Not | 50% or greater (≥ 50%) | Meets the required standard |
| More Likely Than Not | Above 50% (> 50%) | Strongly meets the standard |
Many veterans think they need a 100% level of certainty, but that’s not how the VA system works. A well-explained 50% probability is often enough as long as the rationale is clear, evidence-based, and medically sound.
How Clinicians Apply This Standard
A clinician’s role is to provide a medical explanation, not to decide service connection and not to interpret VA law. Their focus is documenting:
- The diagnosed condition
- The veteran’s medical history
- Service-related events or exposures
- The medical reasoning that supports (or does not support) a ≥ 50% connection
Clinicians use objective information such as:
- Imaging
- Lab results
- Medical records
- Symptom timelines
- Peer-reviewed research
From there, they write a narrative explanation, often called a nexus opinion, that states the probability level and the reasoning behind it.
Compliant language examples
To remain medically and legally appropriate, clinicians avoid absolute statements. Instead, they use phrasing such as:
- “At least as likely as not…”
- “May be associated with…”
- “Potentially related to…”
This keeps the opinion factual and avoids overstating certainty.

Clinicians vs VA Reviewers: Why the Distinction Matters
Veterans often expect their clinician to make the final decision, but that’s not how the system necessarily works.
| Role | Focus | Responsibility |
| Clinician | Medical fact + probability | Provide an opinion supported by clear medical reasoning |
| VA Reviewer | Legal determination | Evaluate all evidence and decide whether service connection is established |
Clinicians do not guarantee outcomes, prepare legal strategies, or interpret VA rules. Their job is to create clear medical documentation that VA reviewers can weigh alongside service records, lay statements, and other evidence.
How Veterans and the Medical Evidence Team Support the Process
While the clinician writes the nexus opinion, both the veteran and the medical evidence team play important roles in preparing the underlying documentation.
Veterans may be able to:
- Provide complete medical records
- Share detailed symptom history
- Explain service events or exposures
The Medical Evidence Team may help by:
- Organizing medical documents
- Ensuring the clinical evidence is clear and easy to review
- Highlighting relevant medical studies
- Checking for compliant terminology (never giving legal advice)
The team does not write nexus opinions or file anything with the VA. Instead, they help ensure the clinician has what they need to create an accurate, well-supported opinion.
The veteran stays in control of their evidence at every step.
Why Understanding This Standard Matters
When you understand the “at least as likely as not” threshold, you can:
- Recognize what a clinician is allowed to say
- Understand why evidence organization matters
- Communicate more clearly with the professionals helping you
- Avoid common misunderstandings about legal vs medical roles
Thousands of nexus opinions fall short not because the condition is unrelated to service, but because the opinion is unclear, unsupported, or missing the necessary probability language.
Learning what this standard means helps you advocate for yourself more confidently and ensures your medical documentation is as strong as possible.



