Diagnostic Code 9211 · 38 CFR §4.130
Schizoaffective disorder combines features of both schizophrenia and a major mood episode — either depressive or manic. Veterans with this condition experience psychotic symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions alongside significant mood disturbances. The condition often surfaces during early adulthood, which for many veterans coincides with military service. Combat stress, sleep deprivation, and the intensity of operational environments can trigger or worsen episodes. It is a chronic condition requiring ongoing psychiatric treatment. The VA rates schizoaffective disorder under the General Rating Formula for Mental Disorders at 38 CFR 4.130.
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| 0% | A formal diagnosis exists but symptoms are not severe enough to interfere with occupational or social functioning, and no medication is required. |
| 10% | Mild or transient symptoms that decrease work efficiency only during periods of significant stress, or symptoms controlled by continuous medication such as antipsychotics or mood stabilizers. |
| 30% | Occasional decrease in work efficiency and intermittent periods of inability to perform tasks due to depressed mood, anxiety, mild psychotic features, chronic sleep impairment, or mild memory loss. |
| 50% | Reduced reliability and productivity due to symptoms such as flattened affect, circumstantial speech, difficulty understanding complex commands, impaired judgment, disturbances of motivation and mood, and difficulty establishing effective work and social relationships. |
| 70% | Deficiencies in most areas including work, family relations, judgment, thinking, or mood. Symptoms may include suicidal ideation, intermittently illogical speech, near-continuous panic or depression affecting the ability to function independently, impaired impulse control, spatial disorientation, neglect of personal appearance, and difficulty adapting to stressful circumstances. |
| 100% | Total occupational and social impairment. Symptoms may include gross impairment in thought processes or communication, persistent delusions or hallucinations, grossly inappropriate behavior, persistent danger of hurting self or others, inability to perform activities of daily living, disorientation to time or place, and memory loss for names of close relatives or own name. |
A formal diagnosis from a psychiatrist is essential. Treatment records should document both psychotic symptoms (hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thinking) and mood episodes (depressive or manic). Medication records showing antipsychotic and mood stabilizer prescriptions demonstrate the complexity of treatment required. Hospitalization records for psychiatric crises are particularly compelling. Buddy statements from family members who have observed episodes of psychosis or severe mood swings help demonstrate real-world functional impact. Employment records showing difficulty maintaining work add further support.
Both are rated under the same General Rating Formula. The medical difference is that schizoaffective disorder includes prominent mood episodes alongside psychotic symptoms, which can mean a broader range of functional impairment.
No. The VA applies the pyramiding rule — you cannot receive separate ratings for overlapping mental health symptoms. All mental health conditions are rated together under one evaluation.
Yes. Under 38 CFR 3.309(a), psychotic disorders that manifest to a compensable degree within one year of discharge may be presumptively service-connected.