📑 On this page
Spouse and family involvement in your claim
The veteran files the claim, but spouse and family can dramatically strengthen it. Here’s how.
Buddy statements (Form 21-10210) — from spouse and family
Some of the most powerful claim evidence comes from people who live with you. They’ve witnessed your symptoms, your changes, your struggles — and they’re competent under the Lay Evidence Doctrine to testify about what they observed.
Spouse statements are particularly strong for
- Mental health claims (PTSD, anxiety, depression) — spouse can describe mood changes, sleep disturbance, social withdrawal, anger outbursts, hypervigilance, nightmares.
- Sexual dysfunction / ED secondary to mental health or diabetes — spouse’s observation is direct evidence.
- Sleep apnea — spouse witnesses snoring, apneic episodes, daytime fatigue.
- TBI / cognitive issues — spouse sees memory problems, communication breakdown, mood swings.
- Chronic pain — spouse witnesses functional limitations daily.
What makes a strong spouse statement
- Specific observations, not characterizations. “He woke screaming twice last week” beats “He has bad PTSD.”
- Before/after comparison — what was the veteran like before service vs. now? Powerful context.
- Functional details — what activities can the veteran no longer do? What accommodations have you made as a family?
- Frequency and pattern — how often do symptoms occur?
Use the generator for structure. One Form 21-10210 per family member.
Family involvement in the process
- Help organize. Claim documents pile up. Family member can be the file keeper.
- Help research. Run the Symptom Wizard together — they may remember symptoms the veteran has normalized.
- Help with C&P prep. Quiz the veteran on their symptoms before the exam. The veteran sometimes minimizes; family knows the reality.
- Witness the C&P if you can. Take notes on what was asked, what was tested, what the examiner observed (range of motion, time spent, demeanor).
- Track appointments and deadlines. The 1-year appeal window passes faster than you think.
Dependent benefits — what your family gets at certain ratings
| Rating | Family benefits |
|---|---|
| 30%+ | Additional monthly compensation for spouse, children, dependent parents |
| 100% P&T | CHAMPVA health insurance, Chapter 35 DEA education for spouse and children, state benefits |
See CHAMPVA and Chapter 35.
When the veteran is reluctant
This is common — many veterans feel guilty filing, or believe their issues “aren’t bad enough,” or worry about being seen as taking advantage. Family role here is gentle persistence:
- Frame the claim as earned compensation, not a handout.
- Frame mental health filing as modeling help-seeking for the next veteran.
- Remind the veteran that filing comprehensively now protects family later (survivor benefits, CHAMPVA, etc.).
- Offer to handle the paperwork — many veterans will let a spouse organize what they won’t organize themselves.
If something happens to the veteran
Dependents may be entitled to:
- Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) if death is service-related
- Survivors Pension if death is not service-related (needs-based)
- CHAMPVA continues for surviving spouse and dependent children
- Chapter 35 DEA for surviving spouse and children
Filing comprehensively now establishes the record that protects family later.
Other resources — tools · conditions · how to file · forms · FAQ