Military service often leaves Veterans with more than just memories; for many, it leaves a lasting physical toll on their respiratory systems. Among the most frequent issues reported by those who served in Southwest Asia are sinus-related conditions.
In fact, according to the 2024 VA Annual Benefits Report, maxillary sinusitis alone accounts for approximately 10% of all respiratory disability claims.
With the passage of the PACT Act, the path to proving your condition is related to your service has become much simpler. However, getting a “service connection” is only half the battle. The VA still looks closely at your medical records to decide how much your condition impacts your life.
This guide will walk you through the specific evidence needed to move from a 0% “non-compensable” rating to the benefits that reflect the true severity of your symptoms.
What Is Chronic Sinusitis?
Chronic sinusitis is more than just a stuffy nose. It is a long-term inflammation of the cavities around your nasal passages. While a normal cold clears up in a week, the VA defines chronic sinusitis as symptoms that last for 12 weeks or longer.
For many Veterans, this condition feels like a constant weight behind the eyes or a dull ache in the cheeks. It often leads to repeated infections that require multiple rounds of medicine. The VA recognizes that this constant cycle of pain and treatment can make it hard to focus at work or enjoy time with family.
Because it is so common in the Veteran community, the VA has specific rules that make it easier for those exposed to burn pits or desert dust to get help.

The PACT Act and Presumptive Service Connection
The PACT Act of 2022 changed the game for Veterans. Before this law, you had to prove that a specific event in the military caused your sinus problems. Now, if you served in certain places, the VA automatically assumes the environment caused your condition.
Chronic sinusitis is a “presumptive condition” for Veterans who served in:
- The Southwest Asia theater of operations (Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, etc.) on or after August 2, 1990.
- Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, and other locations on or after September 11, 2001.
If you have a diagnosis and served in these areas, you don’t need to prove “how” you got it. You only need to prove “how bad” it is today.
Understanding the VA Rating Schedule (38 CFR § 4.97)
The VA evaluates sinusitis under Diagnostic Codes 6510 through 6514. Regardless of the location, whether it’s frontal (forehead), maxillary (cheeks), or pansinusitis (all sinuses), the rating criteria remain the same.
The VA primarily measures the severity of your condition based on the frequency and nature of “episodes.”
Key Definitions: What is an “Episode”?
To navigate the ratings below, it is helpful to understand how the VA distinguishes between flare-ups:
- Incapacitating Episode: A flare-up that requires a provider to prescribe 4 to 6 weeks of antibiotics.
- Non-Incapacitating Episode: Characterized by headaches, facial pain, and discolored discharge, but does not require a prolonged course of antibiotics.
Sinusitis Rating Table
| Rating | Required Clinical Findings or Frequency of Episodes |
| 50% | Highest Rating: Requires radical surgery with functional impairment (constant pain, tenderness, and crusting) OR chronic osteomyelitis (bone infection). |
| 30% | 3 or more incapacitating episodes per year OR more than 6 non-incapacitating episodes per year. |
| 10% | 1 or 2 incapacitating episodes per year OR 3 to 6 non-incapacitating episodes per year. |
| 0% | Symptoms are present but do not meet the 10% frequency threshold. |
Why a 0% Rating Matters
A 0% rating is often referred to as a “non-compensable” rating. While it doesn’t result in a monthly payment, it is a significant legal victory. It establishes Service Connection, meaning the VA acknowledges your condition was caused by your military service.
This makes it much easier to file for an increased rating in the future if your symptoms worsen, without having to re-prove the initial cause.

The “4-Week Rule” for Antibiotics
One of the biggest hurdles for Veterans is the definition of an incapacitating episode. The VA is very specific: an episode is only “incapacitating” if it requires a physician-directed treatment plan that includes 4 to 6 weeks of antibiotics.
If your doctor only gives you a 10-day or 14-day supply of antibiotics, the VA will likely count that as a “non-incapacitating” episode. To get the higher ratings, your medical records must show that your infections are stubborn enough to require those long, intensive treatments. This is why keeping a pharmacy history is so important.
Your prescription records provide the objective dates and durations the VA needs to see.
Essential Medical Evidence for Your Benefits Journey
Because chronic sinusitis affects the inside of your body, the VA relies on, clear, measurable medical proof, not just your description of pain or discomfort. Here’s what matters most:
1. CT Scans: The “Gold Standard”
- A CT scan is a special imaging test that shows exactly what’s going on inside your sinuses.
- It can reveal thickening of the sinus lining, which proves long-term damage—not just a short-term allergy.
- You can be rated without a CT scan, but having one makes your case much stronger.
2. Long-Term Provider Notes
- The VA wants to see a pattern of ongoing care—not just a one-time urgent care visit.
- Regular notes from your Primary Care Provider or an Ear, Nose & Throat (ENT) specialist show that your condition is real and persistent, not a temporary problem.
Objective tests and consistent medical records give your case power. The more clearly you can show the VA the full history of your sinusitis, the better prepared you are to pursue the benefits you are medically, legally, and ethically eligible for.
Common Secondary Conditions Linked to Sinusitis
Chronic sinusitis often leads to other health problems. If you are already service-connected for sinusitis, you may be able to claim these as secondary:
- Sleep Apnea: Chronic nasal obstruction makes it harder to breathe at night. If you can prove your sinusitis “contributes to” or “aggravates” your sleep apnea, you may receive a secondary rating.
- Chronic Rhinitis: This is inflammation of the nasal lining (stuffiness and sneezing). You can be rated for both sinusitis and rhinitis at the same time.
- Asthma: Often, upper respiratory issues like sinusitis can make lower respiratory issues like asthma worse.
What to Expect on Your Journey
Every Veteran’s journey is unique. With the right medical evidence and a clear record of how your conditions affect your daily life, you can move forward on your own terms: prepared to pursue all the benefits you are medically, legally, and ethically eligible for.
Trajector Medical is here to support, never overstep. The story is yours to tell.
Your Journey. Your Story. Your Future. They all belong to you.



