SMC-M: Loss-Combination Rate
SMC at the (m) rate sits two statutory steps above the aid-and-attendance base rate (SMC-L). It applies to specific bilateral anatomical losses or loss of use of paired extremities, plus certain blindness combinations. Authority: 38 USC § 1114(m).
What SMC-M Is
SMC-M, defined at 38 USC § 1114(m), is the third statutory rate above the schedular 100% rate (after the SMC-K loss-of-use add-on and SMC-L aid-and-attendance). It applies when service-connected disabilities produce specific anatomical losses or loss of use of paired extremities, or certain blindness combinations. The 2026 monthly rate is $5,408.55 for a veteran alone (effective December 1, 2025).
Who Qualifies for SMC-M
Any one of the following is sufficient under 38 USC § 1114(m). The statutory text reads:
"if the veteran, as the result of service-connected disability, has suffered the anatomical loss or loss of use of both hands, or of both legs with factors preventing natural knee action with prostheses in place, or of one arm and one leg with factors preventing natural elbow and knee action with prostheses in place, or has suffered blindness in both eyes having only light perception, or has suffered blindness in both eyes, rendering such veteran so significantly disabled as to be in need of regular aid and attendance…"
Translated:
- Anatomical loss or loss of use of both hands
- Anatomical loss or loss of use of both legs with factors preventing natural knee action with prostheses in place
- Anatomical loss or loss of use of one arm and one leg with factors preventing natural elbow and knee action with prostheses in place
- Blindness in both eyes having only light perception
- Blindness in both eyes producing a need for regular aid and attendance
Illustrative Example
Fictional example, not a real claimant. Names and facts are invented to show how the criteria above could apply in a single case.
James K. served in the Marines and was wounded by mortar fire near Fallujah in 2006. He suffered anatomical loss of both hands at the wrist. Even with myoelectric prostheses he cannot perform routine self-care without help. James qualifies for SMC-M at $5,408.55 per month because his condition matches the criteria for anatomical loss of both hands at 38 CFR § 3.350(c)(1)(ii).
SMC-M½ Half-Step
SMC-M½ is not a separate statutory rate; it is the arithmetic mean between SMC-M and SMC-N, authorized by 38 USC § 1114(p) and implemented at 38 CFR § 3.350(f). It is paid when a veteran qualifies for SMC-M and additionally has either:
- Service-connected disability independently ratable at 50% or more (per 38 CFR § 3.350(f)(3)), bumping the rate one step above SMC-M, OR
- A single permanent disability independently ratable at 100% (per 38 CFR § 3.350(f)(4)), with the bump again capped at the next statutory or intermediate rate.
"Independently ratable" means the additional disability cannot be the same condition that supports the SMC-M qualifying loss. 38 CFR § 3.350(e)(3) prohibits double-counting.
For the full intermediate-rate mechanism see the SMC-P explainer.
2026 Monthly Rates
Effective December 1, 2025. Source: VA.gov SMC rate table.
| Rate | Veteran alone | + Spouse | + Spouse + 1 child |
|---|---|---|---|
| SMC-M | $5,408.55 | $5,628.14 | $5,788.96 |
| SMC-M½ | $5,780.00 | $5,999.59 | $6,160.41 |
Evidence in BVA Grants
Across 643 Board of Veterans' Appeals decisions in our corpus that address SMC-M, the evidence types cited in grants:
| Evidence type | Cited in grants |
|---|---|
| VA C&P examination | 272 (~76%) |
| Private medical records | 115 (~32%) |
| Buddy / lay statement | 73 (~20%) |
| DBQ | 56 (~16%) |
| Service treatment records | 46 (~13%) |
| SSA records | 20 (~6%) |
| Nexus letter | 6 (~2%) |
| IMO | 4 (~1%) |
Issue-level grant rate across the SMC-M corpus is approximately 55.5%, materially higher than the BVA-wide grant rate (~31%). The cleaner the documented bilateral loss or loss-of-use finding, the cleaner the path to grant.
Sample case: SMC-M intermediate-rate award
Why BVA Denies (recurring patterns)
Filtering out boilerplate, the substantive denial themes in SMC-M cases:
- No documented loss-of-use finding. "The evidence does not show anatomical loss or loss of use of either hand, leg, or arm" appears repeatedly. Loss of use requires a clear examiner finding that remaining function is no better than amputation; partial weakness or limited range of motion is insufficient.
- No aid-and-attendance predicate for the blindness path. "The evidence does not show that he is permanently bedridden or with such significant service-connected disabilities as to need regular aid and attendance" appears in cases where the appellant argues the SMC-M blindness-plus-A&A path.
- Prosthesis-use evidence undermines knee-factor claim. "The medical evidence does not show that the Veteran is using prosthesis" appears in cases where the appellant claims the both-legs-with-knee-factor path; SMC-M specifically requires the factors "with prostheses in place," and absence of prosthesis use cuts against the SMC-M framing.
Authority & Sources
- 38 USC § 1114(m), (p)
- 38 CFR § 3.350, qualifying conditions and § 3.350(f) stacking math
- VA.gov SMC rate table
BVA decisions are non-precedential under 38 CFR § 20.1303. Volume and pattern data above are from our internal index of post-2019 BVA decisions and are reported as observed patterns, not as predictions of outcomes for any individual claim.