Last Updated: March 2026 | By Dr. Ronald Lee, Board-Certified Psychiatrist (ABPN)
If you are searching for a nexus letter template, you are not alone. Thousands of veterans look for nexus letter examples and templates every month, hoping to find a shortcut to strengthening their VA disability claim. While understanding the structure of a nexus letter is valuable, relying on a template alone can actually hurt your claim.
This comprehensive guide explains what a nexus letter template looks like, the essential sections every nexus letter must contain, why templates alone are insufficient, and how a psychiatrist-written independent medical opinion (IMO) from VetNexusMD delivers significantly stronger results.
Key Takeaway: A nexus letter template shows you the structure, but the medical reasoning and evidence-based rationale are what actually win VA claims. No template can substitute for a qualified medical professional’s individualized analysis of your specific case.
A nexus letter template provides a general framework for the document that connects your current medical condition to your military service. Understanding this structure helps you evaluate the quality of any nexus letter you receive, whether from a treating provider or an independent medical opinion service.
A standard nexus letter template typically follows this general format:
While the overall structure matters, certain sections carry disproportionate weight in the VA’s evaluation of a nexus letter. The following elements are non-negotiable for a nexus letter that the VA will find persuasive.
The VA assigns probative weight to medical opinions based partly on the qualifications of the provider. A nexus letter must clearly establish:
A nexus letter from a board-certified specialist in the relevant field carries significantly more weight than one from a general practitioner or nurse practitioner. For mental health conditions like PTSD, depression, and anxiety, a board-certified psychiatrist is the gold standard.
Every nexus letter must document exactly which records were reviewed. This typically includes:
A nexus letter that references specific records by date and content demonstrates thorough analysis. Vague statements like “I reviewed the veteran’s medical records” without specificity undermine the opinion’s credibility.
The medical rationale is the most critical section of any nexus letter. This is where many template-based letters fail catastrophically. An effective medical rationale must:
The medical rationale transforms a nexus letter from a form letter into a persuasive medical argument. No template can generate this section — it requires genuine medical expertise and case-specific analysis.
The nexus opinion statement must use specific legal language that meets the VA’s standard of proof. The required standard is “at least as likely as not” (a 50% or greater probability), which is expressed as:
Common mistakes in template-based letters include using weaker language such as:
The precise phrasing matters enormously. The VA rating board is trained to parse medical opinion language, and letters that fail to meet the “at least as likely as not” standard are routinely given less probative weight or rejected outright.
A well-structured nexus letter is typically 3 to 8 pages depending on case complexity. The document should be:
While understanding the template structure is educational, actually using a template to create your nexus letter is one of the most common and damaging mistakes veterans make. Here is why:
The core value of a nexus letter lies in its medical rationale — the specific, evidence-based explanation of how your condition is connected to military service. This requires:
A template provides none of this. It gives you a shell without the substance that actually persuades the VA.
VA rating specialists review thousands of nexus letters. They can quickly identify template-based letters that contain:
When the VA identifies a template letter, it typically assigns low probative weight to the opinion, which can be the difference between approval and denial.
Many nexus letter templates circulating online contain outdated or incorrect information about:
Every veteran’s situation is different. A secondary depression claim requires different medical reasoning than a primary PTSD claim. A sleep apnea secondary to PTSD claim involves different physiological mechanisms than a hypertension secondary to PTSD claim. No single template can address the specific nuances of your individual case, service history, medical records, and claimed conditions.
Based on reviewing thousands of VA claims, these are the most frequent mistakes veterans make when using nexus letter templates:
Many veterans find a template online and bring it to their primary care physician, asking them to review and sign it. This approach fails because:
Templates often include placeholder language that is too vague. Phrases like “may be related to service” or “could be connected to military duties” fail to meet the legal standard. The opinion must state that the connection is “at least as likely as not.”
For secondary service connection claims, the nexus letter must explain how the service-connected condition caused or aggravated the new condition. A template that simply states “Depression is secondary to chronic pain” without explaining the bidirectional neurobiological relationship between chronic pain and depression lacks the medical depth the VA requires.
Credible nexus letters cite specific studies. For example, a nexus letter for sleep apnea secondary to PTSD should reference research on autonomic hyperarousal, sleep architecture disruption, and the physiological mechanisms linking PTSD to obstructive sleep apnea. Template letters rarely include these citations.
Strong nexus letters acknowledge and address potential weaknesses in the claim. If there is a gap in treatment records, a pre-existing condition, or a C&P exam with a negative opinion, the nexus letter must explain why the service connection is still warranted despite these factors. Templates have no way to address case-specific contrary evidence.
Some templates do not emphasize the importance of the signing provider’s credentials. A nexus letter for a mental health condition signed by a chiropractor or general practitioner carries far less weight than one from a board-certified psychiatrist.
At VetNexusMD, every nexus letter is individually crafted by Dr. Ronald Lee, a board-certified psychiatrist (ABPN) with specialized expertise in VA disability evaluations. Here is how our approach differs fundamentally from template-based services:
Dr. Lee personally reviews every veteran’s complete medical record package, including military service records, VA treatment notes, C&P exam reports, and private medical records. The medical rationale in each letter is based on the specific facts of your case, not a one-size-fits-all template.
For mental health conditions (PTSD, depression, anxiety, sleep disorders secondary to PTSD, and related conditions), having a board-certified psychiatrist author the nexus letter provides the highest level of probative weight the VA can assign to a medical opinion. Dr. Lee’s credentials include:
Every VetNexusMD nexus letter includes citations to current peer-reviewed medical research supporting the claimed nexus. For example, our sleep apnea nexus letters reference specific studies on PTSD-related autonomic hyperarousal and its impact on upper airway function during sleep.
We begin with a $500 record review to assess whether a supportable nexus opinion can be provided. If Dr. Lee determines that the medical evidence does not support a favorable opinion, you are not charged beyond the $500 record review fee. This protects veterans from paying for a letter that would not help their claim.
Standard turnaround is 1–2 weeks on average from the time of the $500 record review deposit and submission of your medical and military records. Rush delivery is available in 2–4 business days on a case-by-case basis.
To help veterans understand what a properly written nexus letter looks like (without providing an actual template to misuse), here is a section-by-section breakdown with explanations of what each part accomplishes:
Professional letterhead with the physician’s full name, medical degree, board certifications, license numbers, practice name, and contact information. This establishes authority and allows the VA to verify credentials.
Identifies the veteran, states the purpose of the letter (independent medical opinion regarding nexus between condition X and military service/service-connected condition Y), and notes the date of the opinion.
A detailed, itemized list of every document reviewed. This demonstrates thoroughness and allows the VA to verify that the opinion is based on a complete picture of the veteran’s medical history.
A narrative summary of the veteran’s relevant military service history, in-service events or exposures, post-service medical history, treatment timeline, and current symptomatology. This section shows that the physician understood and analyzed the full clinical picture.
The core of the letter. Explains the medical mechanism connecting the condition to service, cites peer-reviewed research, applies the literature to the individual case, and addresses potential counterarguments. This is the section that no template can replicate.
The formal opinion statement using the “at least as likely as not” standard, clearly stating the physician’s conclusion based on the evidence and medical reasoning presented.
The physician’s signature, printed name, credentials, license number, and date. Some letters also include a statement that the physician is willing to testify regarding the opinion if required.
You can use it to understand the general structure, but you should not submit a template-based letter as part of your VA claim. The VA assigns low probative weight to generic letters that lack individualized medical reasoning and literature citations. A template without substantive medical analysis is more likely to hurt than help your claim.
A strong nexus letter comes from a board-certified specialist, contains detailed records review documentation, provides specific medical rationale with peer-reviewed citations, uses the correct “at least as likely as not” legal standard, and addresses the individual veteran’s unique case facts. A weak letter uses generic language, lacks citations, comes from a non-specialist, or relies on template boilerplate.
Quality nexus letters from board-certified specialists typically range from $500 to $1,500. At VetNexusMD, a nexus letter is $1,000 with a $500 record review. Be wary of services charging significantly less — extremely low prices often indicate template-based letters with minimal physician involvement. Conversely, prices above $1,500 do not necessarily indicate superior quality.
While any licensed physician can write a nexus letter, primary care doctors often lack the specialized knowledge to provide the detailed medical rationale the VA expects, particularly for mental health conditions. Additionally, having a doctor sign a template they did not independently author raises ethical and credibility concerns. A letter from a board-certified specialist in the relevant field is significantly more persuasive.
An effective nexus letter is typically 3 to 8 pages, depending on case complexity. Letters shorter than 3 pages usually lack sufficient medical rationale. Letters significantly longer than 8 pages may contain unnecessary padding. The goal is thoroughness without redundancy — every paragraph should serve a specific purpose in building the medical argument.
You can file a Supplemental Claim with a new, properly written nexus letter as “new and relevant evidence.” A comprehensive nexus letter from a board-certified specialist that addresses the specific reasons for your denial can often overcome a prior rejection. Many veterans who were initially denied with weak nexus letters have succeeded on supplemental claims with strong independent medical opinions.
Instead of relying on templates, work with a qualified medical professional who will analyze your specific case and provide an individualized medical opinion backed by current research.
VetNexusMD — Psychiatrist-Written Nexus Letters
Board-Certified Psychiatrist (ABPN) | Evidence-Based IMOs | Nationwide Service
Nexus Letter: $1,000 | Record Review: $500 | DBQ: $300–$500
Turnaround: 1–2 weeks on average | Rush available
Phone: (617) 506-3411
Risk-free medical record review — if a favorable opinion cannot be supported, you are not charged beyond the $500 record review fee.