The content provided on this blog is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Battle Ready Claim Solutions is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.


For many veterans, digestive issues don’t stop when military service ends. If you’re dealing with abdominal pain, bloating, diarrhea, constipation, or unpredictable bowel issues, you may be wondering if Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) qualifies for VA disability compensation.
The short answer is: Yes—IBS can be a compensable VA disability.
IBS is recognized by the VA as a ratable digestive condition, and it can be service-connected in more than one way—including direct service connection, Gulf War presumptive service connection, or as a secondary condition to another service-connected disability like PTSD or medication side effects. Current guidance also shows that IBS is commonly evaluated under Diagnostic Code 7319, with rating levels of 10%, 20%, or 30% depending on symptom frequency and severity.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a chronic gastrointestinal disorder that affects the intestines and can cause recurring digestive symptoms that interfere with daily life.
Common IBS symptoms may include:
Abdominal pain or cramping
Bloating or distension
Diarrhea
Constipation
Alternating diarrhea and constipation
Urgency or straining
Gas
Sleep disruption due to GI discomfort
Veteran-focused guidance describes IBS as a chronic digestive condition that can be triggered or worsened by factors common in military service, including high stress, GI infections, medication use, dietary disruption, and environmental exposures.
Yes. The VA recognizes IBS as a compensable condition when the evidence shows:
You have a current diagnosis
The condition is connected to service (directly, presumptively, or secondarily)
Your symptoms meet the rating criteria based on frequency, severity, and impact
IBS can be especially important for veterans because digestive conditions are often overlooked, underreported, or mischaracterized as “just stress” when they may actually qualify for compensation.
Current veteran-claims guidance indicates that IBS is rated under VA Diagnostic Code 7319 and may be assigned one of the following ratings:
10%
20%
30%
These ratings are based on how often symptoms occur and how severe they are—particularly abdominal pain related to bowel movements plus associated symptoms like stool changes, urgency, bloating, or distension.
A 30% rating may apply when symptoms are frequent and severe, such as:
Abdominal pain related to bowel movements at least 1 day per week during the previous 3 months
Plus two or more associated symptoms, such as:
Change in stool frequency
Change in stool form
Urgency or straining
Bloating
Distension
Mucus in stool
This is commonly described as the highest schedular rating for IBS under the current framework.
A 20% rating may apply when:
Abdominal pain related to bowel movements occurs at least 3 days per month during the previous 3 months
Plus two or more associated bowel symptoms
This middle rating can be highly relevant for veterans whose symptoms are persistent but not documented as weekly.
A 10% rating may apply when:
Abdominal pain related to bowel movements occurred at least once during the previous 3 months
Plus two or more associated symptoms like stool changes, bloating, urgency, or distension
Even a lower rating matters—because it establishes service connection and may open the door to future increases if symptoms worsen.
The VA does not rate IBS just because you say you have stomach problems.
They’re looking for documented, consistent, medically supported evidence that shows:
A formal diagnosis
The pattern of your symptoms
How often symptoms occur
Whether symptoms affect your work, sleep, travel, social life, or daily routine
Whether your condition has been ongoing over time
This is where many veterans get denied:
They have real symptoms, but they don’t build the evidence trail clearly enough.
This is the standard route.
To prove direct service connection, you generally need:
A current IBS diagnosis
Evidence of an in-service event, illness, exposure, or aggravation
A medical nexus linking IBS to service
Veteran-focused guidance on IBS claims identifies these three elements as the core structure for direct service connection.
This is one of the biggest opportunities for many veterans.
Current guidance states that IBS is recognized as a Gulf War presumptive condition, meaning eligible veterans may not need to prove the usual in-service cause if they meet the criteria. The typical requirements include:
A current diagnosis of IBS
Symptoms lasting at least 6 months
Qualifying service in an eligible Gulf War region since August 2, 1990
The listed qualifying areas include places such as Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, the UAE, Oman, the Gulf of Aden, the Gulf of Oman, waters of the Persian Gulf / Arabian Sea / Red Sea, and the airspace above those locations.
If you qualify under presumptive rules, you may not need to fight the same uphill battle as a standard direct-service claim.
That can be a major advantage.
This is another high-value strategy many veterans miss.
IBS may also be claimed secondary to another service-connected condition when that condition causes or aggravates digestive symptoms.
Common secondary pathways may include:
PTSD
Anxiety
Depression
Chronic stress
Medication side effects from pain meds, NSAIDs, antibiotics, or other treatment regimens
Current veteran-claims guidance specifically notes that chronic stress and mental health conditions may disrupt the gut-brain axis, while certain medications can irritate the GI tract and worsen symptoms. It also notes that a strong nexus letter is often critical in secondary IBS claims.
This is worth emphasizing.
Many veterans don’t realize that IBS and PTSD can be connected.
Chronic stress, hypervigilance, anxiety, and trauma-related physiological changes can affect the digestive system over time. If you already have a service-connected PTSD rating, and you’re dealing with chronic bowel symptoms, you may have a legitimate secondary claim strategy worth exploring.
At Battle Ready Claim Solutions, this is exactly the kind of overlooked claim path we help veterans identify.
If you want a stronger claim, your evidence needs to tell a clear story.
Formal IBS diagnosis from a VA or private provider
GI specialist records
Primary care notes documenting symptoms
Medication history
Symptom journal (frequency, urgency, flare-ups, pain, accidents, work impact)
Deployment history (especially for Gulf War veterans)
Lay statements from spouse/family
Medical opinion or nexus letter (especially for secondary claims)
C&P exam preparation notes
The more clearly you document frequency + severity + functional impact, the stronger your claim position becomes.
The highest schedular rating for IBS is generally 30% under the current framework. However, some veterans may still receive compensation at the 100% rate through TDIU (Total Disability based on Individual Unemployability) if their service-connected conditions prevent substantially gainful employment and they meet eligibility requirements.
This is important because many veterans think:
“If the rating max is 30%, it’s not worth filing.”
That’s not always true.
A 30% rating:
Adds to your combined rating
Establishes service connection
Can strengthen related secondary conditions
May support unemployability arguments in the right case
If you’re a veteran dealing with chronic digestive issues, don’t ignore the possibility that IBS may qualify for VA disability compensation.
Whether your claim path is:
Direct service connection
Gulf War presumptive
Secondary to PTSD or another service-connected condition
…IBS can be a legitimate and valuable claim.
Current veteran-claims guidance shows that IBS is recognized as a ratable condition, commonly evaluated under Diagnostic Code 7319, with rating levels of 10%, 20%, and 30%, and that Gulf War presumptive rules and secondary-service pathways may significantly strengthen eligibility in the right cases.
At Battle Ready Claim Solutions, we help veterans stop guessing, stop filing weak claims, and start building stronger, smarter strategies.
You served. You earned these benefits. Now it’s time to claim them with a battle-ready plan.
You don’t have to face the VA claims process alone.


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The information provided in this Resources section is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Battle Ready Claim Solutions is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.