AI can draft appeal letters by synthesizing your medical records, VA decisions, and new evidence into coherent arguments that connect your clinical findings to rating criteria—something that takes veterans weeks of research and writing. The tool doesn't make your case for you, but it transforms scattered information into organized, persuasive prose that actually addresses why the VA's previous decision was incomplete.
Writing an appeal to the VA is intimidating. You're essentially arguing with the government about why their decision was wrong. Most veterans either hire expensive lawyers or write rambling letters that don't effectively address the VA's reasoning. AI changes this by helping you write a clear, structured, persuasive appeal that the VA actually reads carefully.
Here's why AI appeals work better: The VA reviews thousands of appeals. They spend seconds skimming most of them. An AI-drafted appeal is organized, uses proper formatting, directly references the VA's own regulations, and clearly states what evidence contradicts their decision. That structure makes VA reviewers actually read your letter instead of dismissing it.
A strong appeal follows a predictable format: You restate what the VA decided, you explain why that decision was wrong, you cite specific evidence that contradicts it, and you request a different decision. Most veteran-written appeals jump around, repeat themselves, or focus on emotional appeals instead of evidence. AI creates the structure automatically.
More importantly, AI can cite the actual VA regulation the reviewer needs to consider. Instead of saying, "I think the VA made a mistake," you say, "38 CFR 3.102 requires the VA to view evidence in a veteran-friendly manner. The VA's decision did not account for my 2022 VA medical records showing X condition." That kind of specific regulatory citation signals to the VA that your appeal is serious and legally grounded.
For AI to draft a powerful appeal, you need to give it: the original VA decision letter, the evidence you're submitting with the appeal (new medical records, buddy statements, etc.), and your explanation of why the VA's reasoning was flawed. AI then synthesizes all of this into a persuasive letter.
The best part: You review and edit the AI draft before submitting it. You're not blindly sending an AI letter—you're using AI as a powerful writing assistant that handles structure and formatting while you maintain complete control over the argument.
Common misconception: "The VA will know it was written by AI and ignore it." The VA doesn't care who wrote it—they care whether it's logically sound and supported by evidence. A well-structured appeal is a well-structured appeal, regardless of the tool that helped create it.
Try this: Gather your VA decision letter and any new evidence you're submitting. Ask Claude: "Using this VA decision and this new evidence, draft a VA appeal letter explaining why the original decision was incorrect. Use a professional structure: restate their decision, explain the error, cite the evidence that contradicts them, and request reconsideration." Edit the draft, then submit it.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.