Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder — VA Disability Rating Criteria (DC 9404)

Diagnostic Code 9404 · 38 CFR §4.130

What Is It?

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) involves persistent, unwanted thoughts (obsessions) and repetitive behaviors or mental acts (compulsions) performed to reduce the distress those thoughts cause. Common patterns include contamination fears with excessive handwashing, intrusive violent or harm-related thoughts with checking rituals, symmetry obsessions with ordering or counting, and unwanted taboo thoughts. Military environments — where hyper-vigilance, rigid procedures, and life-or-death checking are rewarded — can mask early OCD symptoms or trigger their development. Many veterans report that checking behaviors that started as appropriate operational habits escalated into compulsive rituals after returning to civilian life. The VA rates OCD under the same mental-health framework used for all psychiatric conditions.

Rating Criteria

RatingCriteria
0%OCD has been diagnosed, but obsessions and compulsions are minimal and do not affect your ability to work or engage socially. No medication is required.
10%Obsessions or compulsions are present but mild, only interfering with work tasks under high stress. Medication may be keeping symptoms manageable.
30%Rituals or intrusive thoughts cause occasional dips in work efficiency. You can generally keep up with daily responsibilities, but OCD adds time to routine tasks (extended cleaning, checking, or mental reviewing) and may disrupt sleep.
50%Compulsive behaviors take up a significant portion of your day, reducing your reliability and productivity. You may struggle with complex tasks because intrusive thoughts break your concentration, or rituals make you chronically late. Relationships suffer because others do not understand or grow frustrated with your behaviors.
70%Obsessive rituals dominate your daily routine and severely interfere with work, relationships, and independent functioning. You may be unable to leave the house on time, hold a job reliably, or engage in normal social activities because compulsions consume hours of your day. Intrusive thoughts may include disturbing content that causes intense distress.
100%OCD symptoms are so consuming that you cannot work, maintain personal hygiene, or care for yourself without assistance. Rituals may take up most of your waking hours, or the distress from obsessions is so severe that you are unable to function in any meaningful capacity.

Evidence Needed

A formal OCD diagnosis from a psychiatrist or psychologist is required. Treatment records showing the type of obsessions and compulsions, their frequency, and the treatments tried (SSRIs, exposure and response prevention therapy, or other interventions) are essential. Because OCD symptoms are often hidden — many people perform rituals privately or experience purely mental compulsions — lay statements from household members who can describe the time spent on rituals, avoidance behaviors, and impact on daily life are particularly valuable. If OCD causes you to be late, miss work, or avoid certain situations entirely, document those consequences.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can military service cause OCD?

Yes. While OCD has a genetic component, military service can trigger its onset or significantly worsen pre-existing tendencies. High-stress environments, traumatic events, and the hyper-vigilant mindset required in combat or security roles can all contribute to the development of obsessive-compulsive patterns.

What if my OCD rituals are mostly mental — not physical?

Mental compulsions — silent counting, mentally reviewing events, mental checking — are just as valid as physical rituals for VA rating purposes. The key is the impact on your functioning. If mental rituals consume your concentration and interfere with work or daily activities, describe that clearly during your exam.

Is OCD rated separately from my other mental health conditions?

Typically, no. The VA rates all mental health conditions together under one combined percentage. However, if your OCD involves distinctly different symptoms from another condition like PTSD, it is important that the examiner documents all symptoms so the overall rating reflects total impairment.