Information for US military veterans considering medical cannabis. PTSD, chronic pain, and traumatic brain injury (TBI) are the conditions veterans most often present with in state medical-cannabis evaluations. Authored by the Miracle Leaf® physician network.
VA position on cannabis
The US Department of Veterans Affairs does not prescribe cannabis. Per VHA Directive 1315 and current public guidance, VA providers may discuss cannabis use, document it in the medical record, and continue care without penalty. The VA / DoD Clinical Practice Guideline for PTSD (2023 update) states the evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against cannabis as a PTSD therapy. Veterans pursuing certification do so through state medical-cannabis programs, not the VA.
Important: Veterans participating in a state medical-cannabis program retain access to all other VA care, including pain management, mental-health services, and prescription medications. Disclosure does not affect VA benefits.
PTSD and cannabis
A trauma- and stressor-related disorder that follows exposure to a traumatic event. The 2017 NASEM consensus report found limited evidence that nabilone is effective for improving sleep outcomes in PTSD; broader symptom relief evidence remains limited.
PTSD qualifies under Florida OMMU, Georgia GMCC, and (as of HB 46 of 2025) the Texas Compassionate Use Program. Read the full clinical evidence summary on the PTSD condition page.
Chronic pain and cannabis
Pain persisting beyond expected healing time, lasting months or longer. Cannabis and cannabinoids have substantial evidence for treating chronic pain in adults.
Chronic pain qualifies under all three states we serve. Veterans with service-connected musculoskeletal pain or neuropathic pain following injury are typical evaluation candidates. Read the chronic pain condition page for the full evidence summary.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
Texas added TBI explicitly under HB 46 of 2025. Florida and Georgia evaluate TBI symptoms (chronic pain, sleep disruption, mood changes) under the comparable-class clause or other qualifying-condition statutes rather than as a standalone TBI qualifier. NASEM did not classify TBI as a primary cannabis indication; evidence remains limited and indication-by-symptom.
State program differences for veterans
| State | PTSD | Chronic pain | TBI | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Florida | Yes | Yes (caused by qualifying condition) | Comparable-class | $75 annual state ID. OMMU directory at knowthefactsmmj.com. |
| Georgia | Yes | Intractable pain only | Comparable-class | Low-THC oil (≤5% THC). No flower. No edibles. |
| Texas | Yes | Yes (HB 46) | Yes (HB 46) | Low-THC (≤1% THC). Physician prescription via CURT. No state ID. |
Discounts and considerations for veterans
- Many Miracle Leaf® locations offer veteran discounts on the evaluation fee. Ask the clinic when you schedule.
- Bring your DD-214 or VA ID for any veteran-discount confirmation.
- Cannabis is not covered by health insurance, TRICARE, or VA benefits. Out-of-pocket payment is required.
- If you are using prescription opioids or benzodiazepines for service-connected conditions, discuss cannabis with your VA care team before starting.
- Federal cannabis status remains Schedule I. Federal employees (including some VA contractors) face employment risk; consult your employer policy.
Frequently asked questions
Will using a state medical marijuana card affect my VA benefits?
No. Per VHA Directive 1315, cannabis use does not affect eligibility for VA benefits. VA providers may discuss cannabis with you and document it in your record without penalty. You retain access to all VA care.
Does the VA prescribe medical marijuana?
No. VA providers cannot recommend, prescribe, or assist with state medical-cannabis program enrollment. Veterans pursue certification through state-licensed physicians outside the VA system.
Is cannabis a substitute for opioid pain therapy?
The clinical evidence is mixed. Some observational studies show opioid-dose reduction after cannabis initiation in veterans with chronic pain; randomized controlled trials are limited. NIH and the VA / DoD CPG do not currently endorse cannabis as opioid-replacement therapy.
Can I lose my federal job for using state-legal medical cannabis?
Possibly. Cannabis remains a Schedule I controlled substance under federal law. Federal employees, contractors, and security-clearance holders face employment consequences regardless of state law. Consult your employer’s drug-free workplace policy before pursuing certification.
What records should I bring to my evaluation?
Bring documentation of your qualifying condition: VA disability rating letter, recent VA primary-care or specialist notes, hospital discharge summaries, or imaging or pathology reports. Miracle Leaf® staff can confirm record adequacy before you schedule.
Sources and citations
- VA / DoD Clinical Practice Guideline for the Management of PTSD (2023)
- VA: Marijuana information for veterans
- NASEM: The Health Effects of Cannabis and Cannabinoids (2017)
- NIH NCCIH: Cannabis and cannabinoids
Last reviewed: 2026-05-17. Not medical advice — consult a licensed clinician. Federal cannabis status as of this review remains Schedule I.