Home / VA Claim Guides / Filing Guides
Filing Guides

Supplemental Claims — Reopening with New and Relevant Evidence

A denied claim isn't the end. Submit new and relevant evidence under 38 CFR § 3.2501 and the VA must take a fresh look.

38 CFR § 3.2501 · Free guide from VA Ready

What it is

A supplemental claim is one of the three lanes in the VA''s post-decision review system (AMA appeals). You file it when you have new and relevant evidence the VA didn''t consider in your original decision.

"New and relevant" — what it means

It doesn''t have to be smoking-gun evidence. A new medical record, a buddy statement that wasn''t submitted before, a private nexus letter you didn''t have at the time — all qualify.

Effective date — the big deal

If you file your supplemental claim within one year of the original denial, you keep the original effective date if you win. Miss the one-year window, and you get a new effective date based on when you filed the supplemental.

Three review lanes — which to pick

What counts as new evidence

What does NOT count as new

How to file

Continuous pursuit doctrine

If you keep filing supplemental claims within each one-year window after each denial, the VA treats your claim as continuously pursued — preserving your effective date the whole way back. This can mean years of retroactive pay when you finally win.

Bottom line

If you got denied and have anything new to add, file a supplemental claim. Inside one year keeps your effective date. Don''t accept a denial without exhausting this option.

This guide is free in the VA Ready app

Free, no account: all 50+ filing guides, a personalized timeline from your separation date, an evidence checklist for every condition, and the combined-rating calculator with real VA math.

With Pro

You walk away with the documents that move claims: a VSO-ready Claim Summary PDF with a peer-reviewed evidence appendix, an Exposure Profile PDF mapping every presumptive your service earned, the actual 38 CFR rating criteria for your exact conditions, and all 50 states’ benefits.

This guide is for general informational purposes only and is not legal or medical advice. VA Ready is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Regulations and procedures change; always verify current requirements at VA.gov and consult a VA-accredited representative for help with your claim.