Bipolar I Disorder — VA Disability Rating Criteria (DC 9432)

Diagnostic Code 9432 · 38 CFR §4.130

What Is It?

Bipolar I Disorder is a mood condition defined by episodes of mania — periods of abnormally elevated energy, reduced need for sleep, racing thoughts, impulsive behavior, and sometimes psychotic features like delusions or hallucinations. Between manic episodes most people also experience depressive episodes with low mood, fatigue, and loss of interest. Military service can trigger or worsen bipolar symptoms through extreme stress, irregular sleep schedules, deployment-related disruptions, and traumatic experiences. Some veterans first experience a manic episode during or shortly after service. The VA evaluates bipolar disorder under the same general mental-health rating framework used for all psychiatric conditions (38 CFR 4.130), so the percentage you receive depends on how much your symptoms interfere with your ability to work and maintain relationships — not on the specific diagnosis label.

Rating Criteria

RatingCriteria
0%You have a confirmed bipolar diagnosis, but your symptoms are currently well-managed and do not meaningfully affect your work life or social functioning. No ongoing medication is needed to stay stable.
10%Symptoms are mild or only surface during high-stress periods. You can generally keep up at work and in your personal life, possibly with the help of mood-stabilizing medication.
30%You experience occasional dips in work performance and stretches where you struggle to keep up with job duties, though most of the time you manage adequately. Mood swings, sleep problems, irritability, or low-grade depression are present but do not dominate your daily life.
50%Your reliability at work and in personal commitments is noticeably reduced. You may have difficulty following through on complex tasks, experience frequent mood disturbances, or find it hard to build and keep stable friendships and work relationships.
70%Bipolar symptoms cause serious problems across most areas of your life — work, family, judgment, and emotional stability. You may have periods of reckless spending, severe insomnia during manic phases, deep depressive episodes that leave you unable to function, or trouble controlling impulses. Maintaining steady employment or close relationships is very difficult.
100%You are completely unable to work or care for yourself because of bipolar symptoms. This level reflects persistent psychotic features, dangerous behavior during manic episodes, total withdrawal during depressive episodes, or inability to handle basic self-care like hygiene, meals, and personal safety.

Evidence Needed

You need a formal diagnosis of Bipolar I Disorder from a psychiatrist or psychologist. Treatment records are particularly important for bipolar claims because the condition fluctuates — records that document both manic and depressive episodes over time give the examiner a full picture. Medication history (lithium, valproate, antipsychotics, or other mood stabilizers) and any hospitalizations during manic episodes are strong evidence. If bipolar disorder began during or was worsened by service, service treatment records or statements from fellow service members who witnessed episodes are helpful. Lay statements from family describing manic behaviors (spending sprees, sleepless nights, erratic decisions) and depressive periods (inability to get out of bed, withdrawal) are valuable.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will the VA rate my bipolar and depression separately?

No. All mental health conditions fall under the same rating formula, and the VA assigns one combined rating that reflects the total impact on your functioning. If you have bipolar disorder and a separate anxiety diagnosis, for example, those symptoms are evaluated together for a single mental health percentage.

Can bipolar disorder be service-connected?

Yes. Bipolar disorder can be directly service-connected if it began during service or was aggravated by service. It can also be claimed secondary to traumatic brain injury or other service-connected conditions. A psychiatrist's opinion linking the condition to your military experience strengthens the claim significantly.

What if I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder after leaving the military?

A post-service diagnosis does not prevent service connection. You need evidence that symptoms began during service or were caused by service-related events, even if the formal diagnosis came later. Buddy statements describing behavioral changes during or shortly after service can help bridge that gap.