Buddy statements are written corroboration from people who knew you during or after service and witnessed your service-connected condition's effects—they're valuable precisely because they come from sources outside the medical system and can describe functional impact in everyday language. The VA respects credible lay testimony especially when it aligns with clinical findings; using these statements means framing them as evidence, not character references.
A VA buddy statement, formally known as a lay statement or VA Form 21-10210, is a written account from someone who witnessed a veterans symptoms, behaviors, or in-service events that supports a disability claim. These statements can come from fellow service members, family members, friends, or coworkers and serve as critical evidence when medical records are incomplete or unavailable.
Many veterans lose claims simply because they do not submit strong buddy statements alongside their medical evidence. AI can help veterans and their supporters draft compelling, regulation-aligned buddy statements that address the specific legal criteria VA raters use, increasing the probability that the statement will meaningfully influence a claim decision.
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