You can change your VSO anytime — here's the short version
You are not stuck with your current Veterans Service Officer (VSO), claims agent, or attorney. You can change your VA representative at any point in your claim, you don't need their permission, and you don't owe anyone an explanation. The whole switch comes down to one form: when you appoint a new representative on VA Form 21-22, it automatically revokes the old one. That's the entire process.
Why veterans switch VSOs
You do not need a "good enough" reason — dissatisfaction is enough. Common, legitimate reasons:
- They don't return your calls or emails.
- Your claim has been sitting and nothing is moving.
- They filed something without explaining it, or filed the wrong thing.
- You moved and want a responsive local county VSO.
- A buddy recommended a rep who actually fights for people.
- They pushed you toward a paid "claim consultant" (a major red flag — see below).
Step 1 — Line up your new accredited representative first
Find the new rep before you cut the old one, so you're never unrepresented in the middle of a claim. Make sure they are VA-accredited — by law, accredited representatives help you for free. Where to look:
- A county Veterans Service Office — often the most responsive, local, and free.
- Your state Department of Veterans Affairs.
- A national VSO (VFW, DAV, American Legion, AMVETS, and others).
- VA's official accreditation search to confirm anyone is legitimately accredited.
The VA Ready app's Find-a-VSO tool maps accredited offices near you with real veteran reviews.
Step 2 — Sign a new VA Form 21-22 (or 21-22a)
- To appoint a VSO organization, you and the new rep complete VA Form 21-22 (Appointment of Veterans Service Organization as Claimant's Representative).
- To appoint an individual accredited agent or attorney, use VA Form 21-22a instead.
Filing the new form automatically revokes any prior power of attorney — you do not have to separately "fire" your old VSO. Under 38 CFR 14.631, receipt of your new appointment cancels the existing one. Your new rep submits the form, and your claim file and records move to them.
Step 3 (optional) — Drop your VSO without naming a new one
If you'd rather represent yourself for now, you can revoke the power of attorney in writing at any time under 38 CFR 14.631. Send VA a signed, dated statement that you are revoking your current representative. You can always appoint a new rep later.
Will switching delay or hurt my claim?
Generally, no. You can change reps with a claim pending, and the new rep picks it up where it stands. A few practical notes:
- You do not lose your effective date or your place in line by switching.
- If a C&P exam or a decision is days away, give your new rep a heads-up so nothing slips during the handoff.
- The 21-22 gives your new rep authority to access your file — confirm they can pull it.
Watch out for claim sharks during the switch
If you're frustrated and shopping for help, you'll run into outfits promising to "maximize your rating" for a percentage of your back pay or a few thousand dollars up front. Many aren't even VA-accredited — which means charging you for claim help is against federal law (38 USC 5901). An accredited VSO does the same work for free. Switching VSOs should never cost you a dime. If someone wants a cut of your back pay to "take over" your claim, walk away.
The bottom line
Changing your VSO is your right, and it's simple: find a new accredited rep, sign a new VA Form 21-22 (or 21-22a for an agent or attorney), and the old appointment is automatically revoked. It's free, it doesn't reset your claim, and you don't need anyone's permission. If your current representative isn't fighting for you, get one who will.