ETS — Expiration of Term of Service — is the date your enlistment ends and you separate from active duty. It sounds administrative. For VA disability purposes, it is one of the most financially significant dates of your veteran life.
Why the ETS Date Is a Financial Trigger
The VA pays disability compensation retroactively to your effective date — typically the date you filed your claim or submitted an Intent to File. For conditions documented during service, entitlement begins at separation. File an ITF on your ETS date and every day you wait before completing your claim costs you nothing. Wait two years to file without an ITF and you forfeit two years of retroactive pay. The math is that direct.
Benefits Delivery at Discharge: File Before You Leave
The VA’s Benefits Delivery at Discharge (BDD) program exists because of this dynamic. File between 90 and 180 days before your ETS date and the VA begins processing while you are still on active duty. Your effective date becomes your actual separation date — the earliest possible starting point. BDD requires a complete claim with all supporting evidence and your availability for a VA exam before separation. If you are in your final months of service, this is the single highest-leverage action available to you.
What TAP Does Not Tell You
The Transition Assistance Program covers a lot of ground but explains the financial mechanics of effective dates poorly. Most separating service members hear “file your VA claim” without understanding that a 90-day delay in filing is a 90-day reduction in retroactive pay. The VA’s Integrated Disability Evaluation System (IDES) goes further — it processes VA claims simultaneously with military disability proceedings for service members being medically separated, delivering a rating on day one of veteran status.
What to Do If You Already Separated Without Filing
Your first move is an Intent to File. Submit it online at VA.gov in under five minutes, by phone at 1-800-827-1000, or through a free accredited VSO who will file it on your behalf at no cost. The ITF locks your effective date for one year. Complete and submit your full claim within that window and your compensation is calculated from the ITF date — not the day your paperwork was finished. Use that year to gather strong evidence and build a claim that does not need to be appealed.
Secondary Conditions and the ETS Date Connection
Conditions that develop after separation can still be service-connected if they flow from a condition that began during service — called secondary service connection. Example: you separated with a service-connected knee injury. Three years post-ETS you develop hip problems from compensating for the knee. That hip condition can be claimed as secondary to your service-connected knee; the nexus runs through your original condition, not through active duty itself.
Free Help Available at Every Separation Point
Accredited VSOs have staff at or near every major military installation specifically for separating service members. Under 38 U.S.C. § 5904 and California SB 694 (2026), charging fees for VA claims assistance is illegal. Free accredited help is not inferior help — VSOs have won millions of claims at no cost to veterans. Use them.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does ETS mean?
Expiration of Term of Service — the date your military enlistment or service obligation ends.
How does my ETS date affect my VA effective date?
Filing or submitting an Intent to File on your ETS date locks in the earliest possible effective date. Every day of delay after separation is a day of potential retroactive pay forfeited.
What is an Intent to File?
A simple form (VA 21-0966) that locks your effective date for one year while you gather evidence. Submit one immediately if you have not filed a claim yet.
Can I file a VA claim years after my ETS date?
Yes — no statute of limitations. But your effective date will be your filing date, not your ETS date, so every year of delay is a year of retroactive pay that cannot be recovered.