A lot of veterans are surprised when I tell them the consultation is free. They've spent so long fighting the VA — and dealing with companies that charge for every little question — that a free nexus letter consultation almost sounds too good to be true.
So let me explain why I offer one, and why I think it's genuinely better for you.
You shouldn't have to pay just to ask
By the time most veterans find me, they've already been through it: denied claims, confusing decision letters, exams that didn't go their way. The last thing you need is another bill just to find out whether someone can actually help.
That's the whole reason my consultations are free. You've earned the right to ask a straight question and get a straight answer without reaching for your wallet first.
I'll tell you the truth — even when it costs me the sale
Here's the part that matters most: a free consultation means I have no reason to tell you anything but the truth.
If I look at your situation and I don't believe a nexus letter will move the needle on your claim, I'll tell you that — before you spend a dime. I'd rather lose the sale than take your money for something that won't help you. That honesty is the foundation of how I've built this practice, and it's a big reason so many veterans send their friends and battle buddies my way.
If you're not even sure what a nexus letter is yet, start here — then we can talk about whether one fits your case.
It's built around your convenience, not mine
Beyond the cost, I've set this up to be as easy on you as possible:
- No office visit. Everything is handled by email, so it doesn't matter whether you're in Texas or Alaska — there's no driving anywhere and no sitting in a waiting room.
- No pressure, no obligation. The consultation is a conversation, not a sales pitch. If you decide not to move forward, that's completely fine.
- It's quick. A few emails back and forth are usually all it takes for me to understand your situation and point you in the right direction.
- You leave with clarity. Even if we never work together, you'll walk away understanding your options better than when you started.
What actually happens during the consultation
There's nothing to prepare and nothing to stress about. We'll go over:
- The condition (or conditions) you're trying to get service-connected.
- What you already have — your diagnosis, your service history, and any denials or exam results.
- Whether a nexus letter makes sense, and if so, what kind — a direct opinion, a secondary connection, or an opinion to support an appeal.
By the end, you'll know where you stand and what your next step is — with zero obligation to take it with me.
Why this matters, veteran to veteran
I'm a Marine Corps veteran. I know what it feels like to get the runaround from a system that's supposed to have your back. And I know a lot of you have already been burned — by denials, by delays, or by services that charged a fortune and handed over a generic form letter.
A free, honest consultation is my way of taking the risk and the runaround off the table. You get a real conversation with someone who understands both the medicine and the military, and you decide what to do from there. (Been denied before? That's often fixable, too.)
Ready when you are
If you've got a condition you believe is connected to your service, let's talk. It's free, it's quick, and there's no obligation — just a straight answer about whether I can help.
Email me at nexusletterdoctor@gmail.com for your free consultation, and we'll figure out your next step together.
Every claim is different, and nothing here is a guarantee of a specific outcome. A consultation is general information to help you decide how to proceed.


