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C&P Exam Prep: Migraines
DBQ Overview
Interview + Physical- Form Name
- Headaches_Including_Migraines
- Form Code
- Headaches_Including_Migraines
- Page Count
- 5
- Examiner Type
- Physician
- Estimated Duration
- 30-45 minutes
- Exam Format
- Interview + Physical
What to Expect During Your Exam
Exam Overview
To evaluate the frequency, severity, and functional impact of your migraine headaches in order to assign a disability rating under 38 CFR 4.124a, DC 8100. The examiner will assess the nature of your attacks, how often they occur, how debilitating they are, and the degree to which they interfere with your ability to work and perform daily activities.
What the examiner evaluates:
- Type and diagnosis of headache disorder (migraine, cluster, tension, or other)
- Frequency of characteristic prostrating attacks over the past several months
- Duration of each individual attack episode
- Degree of prostration during attacks - whether partially or completely prostrating
- Economic inadaptability and impact on employment or work attendance
- Associated symptoms: nausea, vomiting, photophobia, phonophobia, visual aura, sensory changes
- Pain characteristics: location (unilateral vs. bilateral), quality (throbbing/pulsating vs. constant)
- Whether pain worsens with physical activity
- History and course of condition including onset and relationship to service
- Current medications and treatments, including abortive and preventive therapies
- Whether any diagnostic tests (imaging, neurology referral) have been performed
- Impact on occupational and daily functioning
The exam is primarily a clinical interview with a focused neurological review. There is no range-of-motion testing for this condition. The examiner will rely heavily on your reported history since migraines are episodic and unlikely to occur during the appointment itself. Your credibility and specificity in describing attacks are critical. Bring a headache diary, treatment records, and any buddy statements if available.
Typical duration: 30-45 minutes
Headache Attack Frequency Assessment
The average number of characteristic prostrating migraine attacks per month or per two-month period over the past several months. This is the single most important metric for determining your rating under DC 8100.
What to expect:
The examiner will ask you to estimate how often you have prostrating attacks. They will look at your medical records, any headache diary you provide, and your reported history. Be prepared to give a consistent, documented average - not just your best or worst month.
Key thresholds:
- Very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged attacks with severe economic inadaptability — 50% - Highest rating under DC 8100; requires documentation of both very high frequency AND severe impact on ability to work
- Characteristic prostrating attacks averaging once a month over last several months — 30% - Requires attacks to be both prostrating in character AND occurring at least once per month on average
- Characteristic prostrating attacks averaging once every two months over last several months — 10% - Requires attacks to be prostrating in character occurring approximately once every two months on average
- Less frequent attacks — 0% - Service connected but non-compensable; attacks are infrequent or not prostrating in character
Tips:
- Track your attacks in a headache diary for at least 3-6 months before the exam, noting date, duration, severity, and functional impact for each attack
- Report your average frequency accurately - if some months you have 3 attacks and others you have 1, explain the variability and give an honest average
- Distinguish between mild headaches and true prostrating migraine attacks when giving frequency - the rating criteria specifically require 'characteristic prostrating attacks'
- If your frequency varies, report the representative pattern over the past several months, not just a recent good or bad stretch
- Bring printed records from your VA or private physician showing migraine visits, medication refills, or documented attacks
Pain considerations: Accurately describe the pain severity during attacks. If pain forces you to stop all activity and lie down in a dark, quiet room, that is the definition of a prostrating attack. Report this clearly.
Attack Duration Assessment
How long each individual migraine attack lasts. The DBQ specifically captures whether attacks last less than 1 day, 1-2 days, or more than 2 days. Longer duration supports the 'prolonged' characterization at the 50% level.
What to expect:
The examiner will ask how long a typical attack lasts and how long your worst attacks last. They will check one of three duration categories on the DBQ.
Key thresholds:
- More than 2 days per attack — Supports 'prolonged' attacks relevant to the 50% 'very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged' criteria
- 1-2 days per attack — Supports characterization as significant attacks for 30% or 50% levels
- Less than 1 day per attack — May be used against higher ratings; clarify total incapacitation even in shorter attacks if applicable
Tips:
- Report your worst-day attack duration, not just an average - if attacks sometimes last 3 days, say so
- Include the post-migraine 'prodrome' and 'postdrome' phases in your duration reporting if they prevent normal activity
- If medication shortens attacks but you still cannot function, describe both the pre-medication duration and the functional impact even after taking medication
Pain considerations: Even if an attack is shortened by medication, the pain and functional incapacity during the attack should be fully described. Medication-responsive attacks still count as prostrating if they caused complete functional impairment before or despite treatment.
Economic Inadaptability Assessment
The degree to which your migraines interfere with your ability to maintain gainful employment. This factor is specifically required for the 50% rating ('severe economic inadaptability') and is relevant context for all rating levels.
What to expect:
The examiner will ask how migraines affect your ability to work, including missed days, reduced productivity, inability to maintain a regular schedule, or need to leave work during attacks. The DBQ has a specific field for describing occupational impact.
Key thresholds:
- Severe economic inadaptability - inability to maintain regular employment due to migraine frequency and severity — Required element for 50% rating alongside very frequent completely prostrating attacks
- Significant but not severe work impairment — Supports 30% and strengthens the overall picture of disability
Tips:
- Describe specific instances where migraines caused you to miss work, leave early, call in sick, or be unable to perform job duties
- If you have lost jobs, been disciplined, or had to change careers due to migraines, report this explicitly
- If you are unemployed or underemployed because of migraines, tell the examiner
- Quantify missed work when possible: 'I miss approximately 2-3 days of work per month due to migraines'
- If you work but struggle through attacks, describe the reduced quality and productivity, not just attendance
Pain considerations: Working through a migraine does not mean you are not impaired. Describe cognitive difficulties, light and sound sensitivity, nausea, and inability to concentrate that persist even when you attempt to work through an attack.
Rating Criteria Breakdown
| Rating % | Criteria | Key Symptoms |
|---|---|---|
| 50% | With very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged attacks productive of severe economic inadaptability. This is the maximum schedular rating under DC 8100. It requires attacks that are: (1) very frequent in occurrence, (2) completely prostrating - leaving the veteran totally incapacitated during the attack, (3) prolonged in duration, AND (4) productive of severe economic inadaptability - significantly impairing the ability to maintain gainful employment. |
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged attacks productive of severe economic inadaptability - 50' |
| 30% | With characteristic prostrating attacks occurring on an average once a month over last several months. Attacks must be characteristic (typical of your migraine pattern), prostrating (forcing cessation of normal activity), and must average at least once per month when looking at the past several months as a whole. |
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With characteristic prostrating attacks occurring on an average once a month over last several months - 30' |
| 10% | With characteristic prostrating attacks averaging one in 2 months over last several months. Attacks must still be prostrating in character but occur less frequently - approximately once every two months on average. |
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With characteristic prostrating attacks averaging one in 2 months over last several months - 10' |
| 0% | With less frequent attacks. The condition is service connected but non-compensable because attacks occur less than once every two months on average, or are not sufficiently prostrating in character to meet the higher thresholds. |
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With less frequent attacks - 0' |
50% With very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged atta ...
With very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged attacks productive of severe economic inadaptability. This is the maximum schedular rating under DC 8100. It requires attacks that are: (1) very frequent in occurrence, (2) completely prostrating - leaving the veteran totally incapacitated during the attack, (3) prolonged in duration, AND (4) productive of severe economic inadaptability - significantly impairing the ability to maintain gainful employment.
Key Symptoms
- Very frequent attacks (multiple per month)
- Complete prostration during attacks - unable to function at all
- Prolonged attacks lasting multiple days
- Severe economic inadaptability - lost jobs, inability to maintain employment, frequent missed work
- Attacks requiring bed rest in a dark, quiet environment
- Attacks not adequately controlled by medication
- Vomiting, severe photophobia, severe phonophobia during attacks
- Post-attack recovery period lasting additional days
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With very frequent completely prostrating and prolonged attacks productive of severe economic inadaptability - 50'
30% With characteristic prostrating attacks occurring on an aver ...
With characteristic prostrating attacks occurring on an average once a month over last several months. Attacks must be characteristic (typical of your migraine pattern), prostrating (forcing cessation of normal activity), and must average at least once per month when looking at the past several months as a whole.
Key Symptoms
- Prostrating attacks averaging once per month or more
- Attacks requiring cessation of normal activity and rest
- Nausea, photophobia, phonophobia accompanying attacks
- Pulsating or throbbing unilateral head pain
- Attacks lasting hours to days
- Some impact on work attendance or occupational functioning
- Need for prescription abortive medications (triptans, ergotamines, CGRP antagonists)
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With characteristic prostrating attacks occurring on an average once a month over last several months - 30'
10% With characteristic prostrating attacks averaging one in 2 m ...
With characteristic prostrating attacks averaging one in 2 months over last several months. Attacks must still be prostrating in character but occur less frequently - approximately once every two months on average.
Key Symptoms
- Prostrating attacks averaging approximately once every two months
- Attacks that incapacitate the veteran during occurrence
- Classic migraine features present (photophobia, nausea, unilateral pain)
- Attacks requiring rest and avoidance of normal activities
- Use of abortive medications
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With characteristic prostrating attacks averaging one in 2 months over last several months - 10'
0% With less frequent attacks. The condition is service connect ...
With less frequent attacks. The condition is service connected but non-compensable because attacks occur less than once every two months on average, or are not sufficiently prostrating in character to meet the higher thresholds.
Key Symptoms
- Attacks occurring less than once every two months
- Attacks that may not be fully prostrating
- Mild to moderate headache episodes
- Minimal impact on daily functioning or employment
CFR: 38 CFR 4.124a DC 8100: 'With less frequent attacks - 0'
How to Describe Your Symptoms
Prostration - The Core Legal Standard
How to describe:
Prostration under DC 8100 means that during a migraine attack, you are forced to stop all normal activity and lie down or remain completely still. Describe what you literally cannot do during an attack: you cannot work, drive, care for children, cook, or perform any daily task. You must retreat to a dark, quiet room and remain motionless. Even minor movement, light, or sound makes the attack worse.
Worst-day example:
“On my worst days, I wake up with a migraine that hits a 9 out of 10 pain level within the first hour. Any light - even from my phone - feels like a spike through my eye. I vomit from the pain and cannot even get out of bed to take my medication. I lie in a completely dark, silent room with a pillow over my face for 12-18 hours. I cannot eat, I cannot watch TV, I cannot have a conversation. My spouse has had to call in sick to care for me and our children on these days.”
What the examiner listens for:
The examiner is specifically evaluating whether the attack is 'prostrating' - meaning it completely incapacitates you. They need to understand that you are not simply uncomfortable but functionally non-functional during the attack. Phrases like 'I had to lie down' carry less weight than 'I was completely unable to function and had to go to a dark room for the entire day.'
Understatements to avoid:
Do not say 'I just get bad headaches sometimes' or 'I pushed through it and went to work.' Even if you tried to work during an attack, describe the severity of symptoms and how impaired you were. Underreporting prostration is the single most common reason veterans receive lower ratings than their condition warrants.
Attack Frequency - Accurate Counting
How to describe:
Report the average number of prostrating attacks per month over the past several months, not just one isolated month. If your attacks vary (2 in January, 1 in February, 3 in March), give the honest average. Be specific: 'Over the past six months I have had approximately 6-8 prostrating migraine attacks, averaging about 1-1.5 per month.' Distinguish between full prostrating attacks and milder headache days.
Worst-day example:
“Looking at the last six months using my headache diary, I had prostrating attacks on the following dates: [list dates]. That averages to about [X] per month. These are the attacks that put me completely out of commission - separate from the milder headache days I also experience.”
What the examiner listens for:
The examiner needs a clear, credible, specific average that they can document and that is supported by any records or diaries you bring. Vague answers like 'pretty often' or 'I don't really track it' make it harder for the DBQ to accurately capture your condition.
Understatements to avoid:
Do not report only your most recent month if it was unusually good. Report the representative average. Do not lump mild headache days together with prostrating migraine attacks - the rating criteria require prostrating attacks specifically, so clearly identifying which headaches qualify is important.
Associated Symptoms - Supporting Classic Migraine Features
How to describe:
Describe all symptoms that accompany your attacks. Specifically mention: nausea and/or vomiting, photophobia (light sensitivity), phonophobia (sound sensitivity), visual aura (flashing lights, scotomas, tunnel vision), sensory changes (pins and needles in extremities), whether pain is unilateral or bilateral, whether pain is pulsating or throbbing, and whether physical activity worsens the pain. These features both confirm the migraine diagnosis and appear as distinct checkboxes on the DBQ.
Worst-day example:
“During my worst attacks, I have severe nausea and usually vomit at least once. Any light - sunlight, phone screens, or even a lamp - causes intense pain behind my eye. Normal sounds like conversation or a TV across the house feel unbearable. I sometimes see flashing lights or zigzag patterns in my vision before the headache begins. The pain is a severe throbbing on the right side of my head, and any movement - even walking to the bathroom - makes it dramatically worse.”
What the examiner listens for:
The DBQ has individual checkboxes for nausea, vomiting, photophobia, phonophobia, visual changes, sensory changes, and whether pain worsens with physical activity. The examiner will check each one based on your report. Failing to mention any of these symptoms means the checkbox may be left unchecked, which understates your condition.
Understatements to avoid:
Do not wait to be asked about each symptom individually. Proactively describe all associated symptoms. Many veterans omit aura symptoms, sensory changes, or vomiting because they assume the examiner already knows. The examiner can only document what you report.
Economic Inadaptability and Work Impact
How to describe:
Describe specifically how migraines have affected your ability to work. This includes missed days, late arrivals, early departures, reduced performance, inability to use screens or work in lighted environments, disciplinary actions, job loss, career changes, or inability to work at all. Quantify where possible. For the 50% rating, the VA must find 'severe economic inadaptability,' so this information is legally critical.
Worst-day example:
“Over the past year, I have missed approximately 20-25 days of work due to migraine attacks. I have also left work early or had significantly reduced productivity on at least 10-15 additional days. My supervisor has documented attendance concerns. Last year I was passed over for a promotion because of my attendance record. I have had to turn down shifts and projects that required consistent performance or exposure to bright light and noise. I have seriously considered whether I can maintain full-time employment at all.”
What the examiner listens for:
The DBQ has a specific field asking the examiner to 'describe the impact of the veteran's headache condition' on occupational and daily functioning. The examiner needs concrete, specific examples - not just a general statement that migraines affect work. The more specific and quantified your description, the more accurately it can be documented.
Understatements to avoid:
Do not say 'I manage' or 'I get by.' If you are struggling at work, missing days, or have experienced any employment consequences from migraines, say so clearly and specifically. Many veterans feel embarrassed to report work difficulties - but accurate reporting of these impacts is essential to an accurate rating.
Pain Quality and Location
How to describe:
Describe whether your migraine pain is typically on one side of the head (unilateral) or both sides (bilateral), and whether the pain quality is pulsating, throbbing, or constant. These characteristics appear as specific DBQ checkboxes and help confirm the migraine diagnosis and character of attacks.
Worst-day example:
“The pain is almost always on the right side of my head, centered around my right eye and temple. It has a severe throbbing or pulsating quality that I can feel with my heartbeat. On my worst days the pain also spreads to the back of my neck and the left side, but it always starts and is worst on the right.”
What the examiner listens for:
Unilateral throbbing pain is a classic migraine feature. The examiner will note pain location (right, left, both sides) and pain quality (pulsating/throbbing vs. constant). These help confirm the migraine variant and support the diagnosis on the DBQ.
Understatements to avoid:
Do not say 'it's just a headache all over.' Be specific about location and quality even if it varies somewhat between attacks. If you have a dominant pattern, describe it.
Treatment History and Response
How to describe:
Describe all medications you have tried and currently use for migraines - both abortive (taken during an attack) and preventive (taken daily). Include prescription medications such as triptans (sumatriptan, rizatriptan), CGRP antagonists (ubrogepant, rimegepant, erenumab), ergotamines, preventive medications (topiramate, propranolol, amitriptyline, valproate), and any injections like Botox or CGRP monoclonal antibodies. Note which medications help and which do not, and describe any side effects. Report if attacks occur despite medication.
Worst-day example:
“I currently take sumatriptan 100mg as an abortive medication. It helps partially on some attacks but does not eliminate the attack - I still need to lie down for several hours even after taking it. It is completely ineffective on my worst attacks. I also take topiramate 100mg daily as a preventive, which I have been on for two years. Despite the preventive, I still have the attacks I described. I previously tried propranolol and amitriptyline without adequate benefit.”
What the examiner listens for:
The DBQ asks about treatment used for the headache condition. The examiner needs to know what you take, whether it works, and whether attacks break through despite treatment. Medication-refractory attacks and ongoing impairment despite treatment strengthen the picture of a severe, poorly controlled condition.
Understatements to avoid:
Do not just say 'I take something for it.' Name your medications, doses, and their effectiveness - or lack thereof. Failing to describe treatment history leaves an important DBQ field inadequately populated.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Reporting best-day or average-day symptoms instead of worst-day and representative symptoms
VA adjudicators are instructed to consider how the condition affects the veteran on a representative basis, including worst-day presentations. Veterans often minimize their symptoms out of habit or stoicism, especially in a clinical setting.
Instead: Per M21-1 guidance, describe your worst-day experience and your representative experience accurately. Tell the examiner: 'I want to make sure I describe my worst attacks, not just my best days.' Bring documentation such as a headache diary to support the full picture.
Impact: 30% - 50% and 10% - 30%
Failing to distinguish prostrating migraine attacks from ordinary headache days
DC 8100 ratings are based specifically on 'characteristic prostrating attacks' - not all headache days. Veterans who count all headache days together without distinguishing the truly prostrating ones make it harder for the examiner to document the correct frequency of ratable attacks.
Instead: Clearly differentiate between your full prostrating migraine attacks (where you are completely incapacitated and must lie down in a dark room) and milder headache days. Give a separate frequency count for each. The prostrating attack count is what drives the rating.
Impact: All rating levels
Not describing the impact on employment in specific, quantified terms
The 50% rating requires 'severe economic inadaptability.' Veterans often mention work is affected but fail to give the specific examples and numbers the examiner needs to document this on the DBQ.
Instead: Quantify missed work days, describe specific employment consequences, and be explicit about whether your ability to maintain gainful employment is threatened or compromised. The examiner's narrative field for occupational impact needs concrete content to support a 50% rating.
Impact: 30% - 50%
Failing to mention all associated symptoms
DBQ fields for nausea, vomiting, photophobia, phonophobia, visual aura, and sensory changes are individual checkboxes. If you do not mention a symptom, the examiner may not check the box, understating the severity and character of your attacks.
Instead: Proactively list all symptoms you experience during attacks, including aura symptoms, gastrointestinal symptoms, and sensory changes. Do not assume the examiner will ask about each one specifically.
Impact: All rating levels - also affects diagnosis confirmation
Saying 'I pushed through it' or minimizing by describing coping strategies
Describing how you pushed through an attack or managed to work despite a migraine can be interpreted as the attack not being prostrating, which is the key standard under DC 8100.
Instead: If you attempted to work during an attack, also describe exactly how impaired you were, how much your performance suffered, and what the consequences were. Context matters: 'I tried to go to work but I was vomiting in the bathroom, could not look at my computer screen, and had to leave after two hours and spend the rest of the day in bed' is very different from 'I went to work.'
Impact: 30% - 50% and 10% - 30%
Not bringing a headache diary or documentation to the exam
Frequency determinations under DC 8100 depend on proving attack frequency over 'the last several months.' Verbal reports without documentation are less persuasive and may be discounted if records do not corroborate them.
Instead: Maintain and bring a detailed headache diary covering at least 3-6 months. Include date, time, duration, severity (1-10), associated symptoms, medications taken, and functional impact for each attack. This is one of the most powerful tools you have at a C&P exam.
Impact: All rating levels
Not mentioning if migraines are related to a service-connected condition (secondary service connection)
If your migraines developed secondary to a TBI, PTSD, cervical spine condition, or other service-connected disability, this affects both service connection and potentially allows the VA to consider the full picture of disability.
Instead: Tell the examiner about any connection between your migraines and other service-connected conditions. For example: 'My migraines began after my TBI in 2010' or 'My migraines significantly worsen when my PTSD symptoms flare.' This information belongs in the medical history section of the DBQ.
Impact: Service connection and all rating levels
Underreporting medication side effects and treatment failures
Multiple failed treatments and ongoing impairment despite aggressive treatment demonstrate the severity and refractory nature of the condition. Veterans often do not think to mention this.
Instead: Tell the examiner about every medication you have tried, including those that did not work or caused side effects that required discontinuation. Describe whether your current medications adequately control your attacks or whether attacks still break through.
Impact: 30% - 50%
Prep Checklist
Before Your Exam
Day Of
During the Exam
After the Exam
Your Rights During a C&P Exam
- You have the right to an adequate C&P examination - one that considers the full history of your condition, not just the day of the exam. If the examiner does not take an adequate history, the examination may be considered inadequate for rating purposes.
- You have the right to submit lay evidence (your own testimony, buddy statements) regarding the frequency, severity, and impact of your migraines. Per M21-1, lay evidence of prostration from migraines is competent and must be considered by adjudicators.
- You have the right to request a copy of your completed DBQ as part of your claims file through a records request. Review it for accuracy after the exam.
- You have the right to record your C&P examination in most states. Check your specific state's one-party consent laws. Inform the examiner at the start of the appointment if you choose to record.
- You have the right to challenge an inadequate or inaccurate C&P examination by requesting a new examination or submitting a rebuttal. If the DBQ does not accurately reflect your reported symptoms, work with your VSO to address this.
- You have the right to submit a headache diary, medical records, and buddy statements as supporting evidence. These should be part of your claims file for the examiner to review before completing the DBQ.
- You have the right to have all associated conditions evaluated. If your migraines are secondary to a service-connected TBI, PTSD, or other condition, you have the right to have that relationship evaluated and potentially establish secondary service connection.
- You have the right to a rating that reflects your condition on your worst and representative days - not just how you present on exam day. The VA is required to evaluate the full range and history of your disability, not a snapshot of one appointment.
- You have the right to increase your rating if your condition worsens. You can file for an increased rating at any time after your initial rating decision if your migraine frequency or severity has increased.
- You have the right to an extraschedular rating evaluation if your migraines cause an exceptional degree of disability not adequately captured by DC 8100's maximum 50% rating, under 38 CFR 3.321(b)(1).
Related Conditions
- Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Migraines are one of the most common residuals of TBI and may be secondarily service connected to a service connected TBI. Per M21 1, secondary service connection for migraines following TBI is a recognized pathway. The TBI DBQ and Headaches DBQ are often completed together.
- Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) PTSD and migraines frequently co occur in veterans. Stress and PTSD symptom flares are common migraine triggers. Migraines may be ratable as secondary to service connected PTSD if a medical nexus can be established.
- Cervical Spine Condition Cervical spine injuries and degenerative disc disease can cause cervicogenic headaches and may aggravate or trigger migraines. If you have a service connected cervical condition, your migraines may be ratable as secondary.
- Sleep Apnea Sleep disturbances from obstructive sleep apnea are a recognized migraine trigger. Veterans with service connected sleep apnea may have migraines that are secondary to or aggravated by the sleep condition.
- Tinnitus Tinnitus and migraines frequently co occur, particularly following noise exposure or TBI. Both may be service connected independently, and the combination significantly affects quality of life and daily functioning.
- Depression and Anxiety Chronic migraine is associated with higher rates of depression and anxiety disorders. If service connected mental health conditions are present, migraines may be secondarily connected to them, or they may be separately ratable conditions that compound overall disability.
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This C&P exam preparation guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, medical, or claims advice. Always consult with a qualified Veterans Service Organization (VSO) representative or VA-accredited attorney for guidance specific to your claim. Never exaggerate, minimize, or fabricate symptoms during a C&P examination.