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VA Disability Rating

VA Disability Rating for Ankle (Limited Motion)

Limited ankle motion is rated as moderate or marked based on how restricted the joint is.

Diagnostic code 5271 · §4.71a · Musculoskeletal system · up to 20%

How the VA rates Ankle (Limited Motion)

The VA assigns one of these ratings for Ankle, limited motion of, based on the severity of your condition. These criteria are summarized from §4.71a:

RatingWhen it applies
20%Marked (less than 5 degrees dorsiflexion or less than 10 degrees plantar flexion)
10%Moderate (less than 15 degrees dorsiflexion or less than 30 degrees plantar flexion)

Conditions commonly connected to Ankle (Limited Motion)

Ankle (Limited Motion) is frequently claimed alongside, or as a secondary to, these conditions. If you have any of them, they may be separately ratable:

Knee condition (altered gait)Opposite ankle (compensating)Plantar fasciitisBack condition (altered gait)Degenerative arthritis

How to strengthen a Ankle (Limited Motion) claim

The rating you receive depends almost entirely on your evidence and your C&P exam. To put your best claim forward:

Peer-Reviewed Research on Ankle (Limited Motion)

19 peer-reviewed studies linked to Ankle (Limited Motion) (diagnostic code 5271) in the VA Ready app, sourced from PubMed and the U.S. National Library of Medicine. Every citation is real and links to the source — bring them to your C&P exam or hand them to your VSO.

  1. Systematic reviewPrimary2024
    Treatment of Chronic Ankle Instability in the Military Population: A Systematic Review
    Foot & Ankle Specialist · 2024
    • Surgical and conservative care for chronic ankle instability in service members
    • High prevalence of ankle instability and limited motion in military
    • Return-to-duty rates and persistent functional deficits

    Why it matters: Direct military-population SR supports nexus/severity for DC 5271

    View on PubMed ↗
  2. Cross-sectionalPrimary2024
    Prevalence and risk factors of ankle osteoarthritis in a population-based study.
    Foot Ankle Surg · 2024
    • Radiographic ankle osteoarthritis prevalence was 13.9%, with 1.2% reporting painful ankle OA.
    • Female sex, aging, prior ankle fracture, and chronic ankle instability were independent risk factors for ankle OA.

    Why it matters: Quantifies ankle OA prevalence and confirms prior ankle trauma/instability as causal risk factors, supporting the in-service-injury-to-arthritis nexus for DC 5271.

    View on PubMed ↗
  3. Systematic reviewPrimary2023
    Total ankle replacement versus ankle arthrodesis for patients aged 50-85 years with end-stage ankle osteoarthritis: the TARVA RCT.
    Health Technol Assess · 2023
    • Both total ankle replacement and ankle fusion improved walking/standing quality of life at 1 year, with no statistically significant difference on the primary outcome.
    • Wound-healing issues (13.4% vs 5.7%) and nerve injuries (4.2% vs <1%) were higher with total ankle replacement; ankle-fusion non-union was 12.1% (7.1% symptomatic).
    • A post hoc analysis showed fixed-bearing total ankle replacement statistically outperformed fusion on the walking/standing score.

    Why it matters: Highest-quality RCT for end-stage ankle OA surgery, documenting substantial residual disability and complication burden relevant to severe DC 5271 cases.

    View on PubMed ↗
  4. Cohort studyPrimary2022
    How Common is Subsequent Posterior Tibial Tendon Dysfunction or Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome After Ankle Sprain Injury?
    The Journal of Knee Surgery · 2022
    • Quantifies subsequent posterior tibial tendon and tarsal tunnel diagnoses after ankle sprain
    • Secondary-condition pipeline for downstream VA claims
    • Time-to-secondary-condition reported

    Why it matters: Supports secondary service connection for ankle/foot conditions from in-service sprain

    View on PubMed ↗
  5. ReviewPrimary2021
    Ankle Osteoarthritis.
    Rev Bras Ortop (Sao Paulo) · 2021
    • The main etiology of ankle OA is post-traumatic, and prevalence is higher among young and obese people.
    • Overall risk of developing post-traumatic ankle OA after 20 years is almost 40%, especially in Weber type B and C bimalleolar fractures.
    • In talus fractures the prevalence of post-traumatic OA approaches 100% depending on lesion severity and follow-up time.

    Why it matters: Documents that most ankle arthritis is post-traumatic with high long-term incidence after injury, anchoring causation and natural-history arguments for DC 5271.

    View on PubMed ↗
  6. Meta-analysisPrimary2020
    Clinical Outcomes of Total Ankle Arthroplasty Versus Ankle Arthrodesis for the Treatment of End-Stage Ankle Arthritis in the Last Decade: a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
    J Foot Ankle Surg · 2020
    • Total ankle arthroplasty produced significantly better AOFAS function and range-of-motion improvement than arthrodesis.
    • No significant differences were found between arthroplasty and fusion in pain relief, gait analysis, or patient satisfaction.
    • Total ankle arthroplasty had significantly higher complication and reoperation rates than arthrodesis.

    Why it matters: Confirms that even with modern surgery end-stage ankle arthritis leaves persistent functional and motion deficits, supporting severity ratings under DC 5271.

    View on PubMed ↗
  7. ReviewPrimary2019
    Epidemiology of Ankle Sprains and Chronic Ankle Instability
    Journal of Athletic Training · 2019
    • ~40% of ankle sprains progress to chronic ankle instability
    • Highest incidence in physically active populations including military training
    • Population-level incidence rates

    Why it matters: In-service ankle sprain commonly causes lasting limitation of motion

    View on PubMed ↗
  8. ReviewPrimary2019
    Current Concepts in Osteoarthritis of the Ankle: Review.
    Surg Technol Int · 2019
    • Review of ankle osteoarthritis: a leading cause of chronic disability, most commonly post-traumatic, occurring in younger patients and associated with obesity.
    • Presents with stiffness, swelling, and pain; diagnosis uses four weight-bearing radiographic views.
    • Surgical options for moderate-severe disease either carry high complication rates or restrict ankle range of motion.

    Why it matters: Comprehensive overview of post-traumatic ankle arthritis, its disability burden, and how treatment affects range of motion, directly supporting a limited-ankle-motion claim.

    View on PubMed ↗
  9. Clinical guidelinePrimary2016
    2016 consensus statement of the International Ankle Consortium: prevalence, impact and long-term consequences of lateral ankle sprains.
    Br J Sports Med · 2016
    • International Ankle Consortium consensus identifies lateral ankle sprain and resulting chronic ankle instability as a conduit to a significant global healthcare burden.
    • Early management of lateral ankle sprain is recommended to reduce chronic ankle instability and its sequelae.
    • Chronic ankle instability is linked to decreased physical activity and early-onset ankle joint post-traumatic osteoarthritis.

    Why it matters: Authoritative consensus tying acute ankle sprains to chronic instability and early-onset arthritis, the precise progression underlying DC 5271 claims.

    View on PubMed ↗
  10. Meta-analysisPrimary2015
    Hyaluronic acid and other conservative treatment options for osteoarthritis of the ankle.
    Cochrane Database Syst Rev · 2015
    • Hyaluronic acid reduced the Ankle Osteoarthritis Scale total score by only 12% at six months versus placebo, on low-quality evidence.
    • Insufficient data exist to create an evidence synthesis as a base for ankle-OA treatment guidelines.
    • Guidelines used for hip and knee OA may not apply to ankle OA because its etiology (usually trauma) differs.

    Why it matters: Shows conservative options for ankle OA are limited and weakly effective, reinforcing that the condition often remains symptomatic and disabling (DC 5271).

    View on PubMed ↗
  11. Systematic reviewPrimary2014
    Chronic complaints after ankle sprains: a systematic review on effectiveness of treatments.
    J Orthop Sports Phys Ther · 2014
    • Although most people recover after a lateral ankle sprain, a considerable percentage have persistent complaints.
    • A training program produced better pain and function outcomes and fewer recurrent sprains than a wait-and-see policy.
    • Evidence was insufficient to determine the most effective surgical treatment for chronic post-sprain complaints.

    Why it matters: Demonstrates that ankle symptoms frequently persist despite treatment, supporting chronicity and residual functional loss central to DC 5271.

    View on PubMed ↗
  12. Cohort studyPrimary2010
    Incidence of ankle sprains among active-duty members of the United States Armed Services from 1998 through 2006.
    J Athl Train · 2010
    • The ankle-sprain incidence rate was 34.95 per 1,000 person-years among US active-duty service members from 1998 through 2006.
    • This incidence was 5 times greater than that previously reported in civilian population studies.
    • Female service members were 21% more likely than males to sustain an ankle sprain (IRR 1.21).

    Why it matters: Establishes that ankle injuries occur at five times the civilian rate in active-duty military, directly supporting service-connection for ankle limited-motion claims (DC 5271).

    View on PubMed ↗
  13. Meta-analysisSupporting2023
    Safety and efficacy of total ankle arthroplasty versus ankle arthrodesis for ankle osteoarthritis: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
    Foot (Edinb) · 2023
    • Meta-analysis of 36 studies comparing total ankle arthroplasty vs ankle arthrodesis for ankle osteoarthritis.
    • Arthroplasty showed lower risk of infection (RR 0.63), amputation (RR 0.40), and non-union (RR 0.11), plus significantly greater overall range of motion than fusion.
    • Fusion inherently sacrifices ankle motion, unlike arthroplasty.

    Why it matters: Demonstrates that surgical management of end-stage ankle arthritis directly trades off range of motion, relevant to severity and treatment outcomes in a limited-ankle-motion claim.

    View on PubMed ↗
  14. Meta-analysisSupporting2023
    One in Three Patients With Chronic Lateral Ankle Instability Has a Cartilage Lesion.
    Am J Sports Med · 2023
    • The pooled incidence of (osteo)chondral lesions in ankles with chronic lateral instability was 32.2% (about one in three).
    • Of all lesions, 57% were osteochondral and 85% were located on the talus (68% medial talar dome).

    Why it matters: Links chronic ankle instability to intra-articular cartilage damage, the mechanism by which in-service ankle injuries progress to arthritis under DC 5271.

    View on PubMed ↗
  15. ReviewSupporting2022
    Examination of Ankle Trauma in United States Military Members: A Scoping Review.
    Cureus · 2022
    • Military members' ankle injuries and return-to-duty expectations differ significantly from the general population.
    • The review identified a lack of RCTs, underrepresentation of vulnerable military subgroups, and no single validated test for ankle mobility/strength to clear return to duty.

    Why it matters: Characterizes the distinct burden and assessment gaps of military ankle trauma, supporting service-connection context for DC 5271.

    View on PubMed ↗
  16. Meta-analysisSupporting2017
    Treatment and prevention of acute and recurrent ankle sprain: an overview of systematic reviews with meta-analysis.
    Br J Sports Med · 2017
    • Overview of 46 systematic reviews on treatment of acute ankle sprain and chronic ankle instability.
    • Strong evidence for NSAIDs and early mobilization for acute pain/swelling/function; bracing and neuromuscular training prevent recurrence.
    • Conflicting evidence for surgery and acupuncture in acute sprains.

    Why it matters: Summarizes the evidence base for managing the recurrent ankle sprains/instability that commonly precede limited ankle motion, supporting treatment-history and prognosis context in an ankle claim.

    View on PubMed ↗
  17. ReviewSupporting2013
    Understanding and treating lateral ankle sprains and their consequences: a constraints-based approach.
    Sports Med · 2013
    • Lateral ankle sprains commonly progress along a continuum of disability: ~30% develop chronic ankle instability and up to 78% of those develop post-traumatic ankle osteoarthritis.
    • Consequences include ligament laxity, restricted range of motion, and impaired gait and postural control.
    • Frames ankle sprain as more than a local injury, with lasting structural and sensorimotor deficits.

    Why it matters: Establishes the causal pathway from a service-typical ankle sprain to chronic instability and limited motion / arthritis, supporting service-connection and chronicity in an ankle-motion claim.

    View on PubMed ↗
  18. Cohort studySupporting2012
    Twenty-one-year follow-up of supination-external rotation type II-IV (OTA type B) ankle fractures: a retrospective cohort study.
    J Orthop Trauma · 2012
    • At a median 21-year follow-up, excellent or good results were seen for functional score (92%) and osteoarthritis (97%).
    • Whole-person functional impairment ranged from 0% to 16%.
    • No outcome differences were found between operative and nonoperative treatment or between fracture subtypes.

    Why it matters: Provides long-term natural-history data showing measurable residual ankle impairment decades after injury, informing prognosis for DC 5271 claims.

    View on PubMed ↗
  19. Systematic reviewBackground2023
    Brain Neuroplasticity Related to Lateral Ankle Ligamentous Injuries: A Systematic Review.
    Sports Med · 2023
    • Structural and functional brain adaptations were found in patients with chronic ankle instability versus healthy controls or copers.
    • Alterations were mainly in the sensorimotor network (pre/postcentral gyrus, supplementary and middle frontal areas) and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex.
    • White-matter microstructure changes in the cerebellum were related to lateral ankle sprains.

    Why it matters: Suggests ankle injury produces central nervous-system changes that help explain persistent dysfunction and high recurrence, contextualizing chronicity in DC 5271.

    View on PubMed ↗

Citations are provided for general educational use and are not medical advice. The VA Ready app pairs every study with its key findings and a one-tap Claim Summary PDF appendix.

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Common questions

What is the VA rating for Ankle (Limited Motion)?

The VA rates Ankle, limited motion of under diagnostic code 5271 (§4.71a). Ratings run up to 20%, assigned from the criteria in the table above based on the severity of your condition.

What diagnostic code does the VA use for Ankle (Limited Motion)?

Diagnostic code 5271, rated under §4.71a of the VA Schedule for Rating Disabilities.

Can Ankle (Limited Motion) be claimed as a secondary condition?

Yes. Ankle (Limited Motion) is commonly connected to conditions like Knee condition (altered gait), Opposite ankle (compensating), Plantar fasciitis. A secondary claim needs a medical nexus linking it to your service-connected condition.

This page is for general informational purposes only and is not legal or medical advice. Rating criteria are summarized from 38 CFR Part 4; the VA determines actual ratings based on your evidence and exam. VA Ready is not affiliated with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Always verify current criteria at VA.gov and consult a VA-accredited representative.