Claim Denied? It’s Not the End 

That denial letter isn’t the final word—it’s just the first one. Here's how to regroup, refocus, and fight back with a smarter claim…

Written by

Tom Hurley

I’ll never forget the first time I got that letter. 
You know the one. 

Thick envelope. Official language. A gut-punch conclusion: “We are unable to grant…” 

I’d spent weeks gathering records, listing conditions, filling out forms—only to feel like I’d been kicked back to square one. But here’s the truth I want every veteran to hear: 

A denial isn’t the end. It’s just a start point you didn’t expect. 

Once I caught my breath, I started reading every line of that decision again—not emotionally, but strategically. What did they say? What evidence did they use—or ignore? Was there a missed nexus? A vague statement? A medical opinion that didn’t go far enough? 

Here’s what I’ve learned: 

  • Most denials are fixable. It just takes better documentation—or sometimes a sharper angle. 
  • Your decision letter is your blueprint. It tells you exactly why they denied the claim. 
  • You don’t need to yell louder. You need to build smarter. 

If you’ve been denied: 

  1. Read the decision carefully. Not just the conclusion—read the rationale. Highlight it. 
  1. Request a copy of your C&P exam. It may contain opinions that don’t line up with your reality. 
  1. Talk to a VSO. Seriously. Don’t walk this alone. A trained rep can help you plot your next move. 
  1. Gather what was missing. Lay statements, clearer diagnoses, stronger DBQs, or better evidence of service connection. 
  1. Consider a Supplemental Claim. If you’ve got new and relevant evidence, this is your lane. 

Too many veterans give up at the first “no.” 
I almost did, too. But now I know how to respond—with precision, not frustration. 

That’s why I built FTV|BTV Magazine. So you don’t have to guess. And so you know you’re not alone. 

Issue #1: Survivor shows how I navigated those early claim days, step-by-step. 
Issue #2 digs deeper—breaking down DBQs, C&P exams, and what a real claim strategy looks like. 

If you’ve got that envelope in your hand right now, take a breath. 

Then turn the page. 
You’re not done. You’re just getting started. 

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