Peripheral Vestibular Disorders — VA Disability Rating Criteria (DC 6204)

Diagnostic Code 6204 · 38 CFR §4.87

What Is It?

Peripheral vestibular disorders affect the balance organs of the inner ear, causing dizziness, vertigo, imbalance, and nausea. These disorders include benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV), labyrinthitis, vestibular neuritis, and other conditions affecting the semicircular canals and vestibular nerve. For veterans, these conditions commonly result from blast exposure, head trauma, noise-induced inner ear damage, or infections acquired during service. Symptoms can range from brief episodes of positional vertigo to persistent severe imbalance that prevents safe walking, driving, or working. The VA rates peripheral vestibular disorders under DC 6204, separate from Meniere disease which has its own code.

Rating Criteria

RatingCriteria
10%Occasional dizziness. Vestibular symptoms that are infrequent and mild, causing minor impairment in daily activities. Objective findings supporting the diagnosis are required for this compensable rating.
30%Dizziness and occasional staggering. This is the maximum schedular rating for DC 6204. Vestibular symptoms that cause frequent dizziness with episodes of staggering or imbalance, significantly limiting activities such as driving, working at heights, or walking on uneven surfaces. Hearing impairment or suppuration is rated separately and combined.

Evidence Needed

An ENT or neurotology evaluation documenting the vestibular disorder is essential. Vestibular function testing — such as videonystagmography (VNG), electronystagmography (ENG), or rotary chair testing — provides objective evidence of vestibular dysfunction. The VA requires objective findings supporting the diagnosis before a compensable rating can be assigned. Audiometric testing may show associated hearing loss. Service treatment records documenting head trauma, blast exposure, or ear infections help establish nexus. Buddy statements describing vertigo episodes, falls, and limitations on activities are important because symptoms are episodic and may not be present during an exam.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the maximum rating for vestibular disorders under DC 6204?

The maximum schedular rating under DC 6204 is 30%. If your vestibular condition also causes hearing loss, that is rated separately under DC 6100. If the condition is severe enough to prevent substantial gainful employment, TDIU may be an option.

How is DC 6204 different from Meniere disease (DC 6205)?

DC 6204 covers peripheral vestibular disorders generally, while DC 6205 is specifically for Meniere syndrome. Meniere disease has higher potential ratings (up to 100%) because it involves a specific combination of vertigo, hearing loss, and tinnitus. If your condition meets Meniere criteria, DC 6205 may be more favorable.

What if my vertigo does not happen during the exam?

This is very common. Vestibular symptoms are episodic. Formal vestibular testing (VNG/ENG) can detect dysfunction even between episodes. Buddy statements and symptom logs documenting episodes provide essential evidence of frequency and severity.