Why Veterans Are Always Tired (Chronic Fatigue Explained)

Picture of Leah Bucholz

Leah Bucholz

Leah Bucholz, PA-C, is a Board-Certified Physician Assistant, U.S. Army combat veteran, and nationally recognized medical expert in veterans’ disability claims. A former VA Compensation & Pension examiner, she founded Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting to provide independent, regulation-based medical opinions (“nexus” letters) grounded in the VA’s Schedule for Rating Disabilities (38 CFR). Leah’s work is frequently cited in favorable Board of Veterans’ Appeals decisions, and her content draws directly from authoritative sources such as VA.gov, the eCFR, and the Federal Register.
Why Veterans Are Always Tired

At Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting, our blogs are written and reviewed by licensed medical professionals or military veterans with direct experience in the VA claims process. Our team has served as healthcare providers, combat veterans, and former VA examiners — giving us unique insight into both the medical and regulatory side of benefits. Every article is designed to provide accurate, trustworthy, and practical guidance so that veterans and their families can make informed decisions with confidence.

Why Veterans Are Always Tired

You wake up already drained. The day hasn’t even started, yet your body feels heavy and your mind feels slow. By midday, you crash. Coffee barely helps. And when you finally get to bed, you still wake up feeling like you never rested at all.

This is a reality for many people, but especially common among those who have served. When people say veterans are always tired, they are not exaggerating. This kind of exhaustion goes far beyond normal tiredness. It is persistent, frustrating, and often confusing, especially when medical tests come back “normal.”

So, why veterans are always tired?

Leah Bucholz breaks down chronic fatigue from a medical perspective, explains why it’s so complex, and explores why so many veterans experience it.

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Fatigue Is a Symptom, Not a Diagnosis

One of the most important things to understand is that fatigue itself is not a diagnosis. It’s a symptom. That means it’s usually a sign of something else happening in the body.

There is a condition called chronic fatigue syndrome, but that’s a specific diagnosis with its own criteria. What most people experience is general fatigue, which can come from many different sources.

Fatigue is one of the most common complaints in medicine because it can be linked to a wide range of underlying issues, including:

  • Sleep disruption

  • Hormonal imbalance

  • Chronic inflammation

  • Nervous system dysregulation

  • Depression or stress

  • Chronic pain

  • Medication side effects

  • Physical deconditioning

For many veterans, it’s not just one of these factors. It’s several at once, layered together over time.

Sleep Problems: The Hidden Energy Drain

You can sleep eight or even ten hours and still feel exhausted. That’s because sleep quality matters more than sleep quantity.

Restorative sleep depends on deep sleep cycles, especially REM sleep. During these phases, the body repairs itself, regulates hormones, and resets the brain.

But if sleep is constantly interrupted, the body never fully recovers.

Common causes of disrupted sleep include:

  • Hypervigilance

  • Nightmares

  • Chronic pain

  • Breathing disturbances

  • Stress hormone imbalance

These issues are especially common in individuals dealing with post-traumatic stress or chronic stress states. Even if you’re not fully aware of waking up, your body may be stuck in a state of alertness.

This is one major reason why veterans are always tired. Their bodies never fully “switch off.”

The Nervous System Stuck in Overdrive

The autonomic nervous system controls how your body uses energy. It has two main modes:

  • Sympathetic: “fight or flight”

  • Parasympathetic: “rest and digest”

In a healthy system, these two modes balance each other.

But in chronic stress conditions, the body can get stuck in sympathetic overdrive. That means it’s constantly preparing for danger, even when there isn’t any.

When this happens:

  • Heart rate variability decreases

  • Recovery slows down

  • Energy becomes unstable

  • You may feel “wired but tired”

This pattern is extremely common in veterans, particularly those with a history of high-stress environments. It helps explain why veterans are always tired even when they’re not physically active.

Chronic Inflammation and Immune Activity

Another key factor is low-grade inflammation.

Even when lab results appear normal, the body can still be dealing with subtle, ongoing immune activation. This kind of inflammation uses energy constantly, like a background process that never shuts off.

Symptoms can include:

  • Fatigue

  • Brain fog

  • Muscle aches

  • Reduced endurance

The body essentially diverts energy toward maintaining immune signaling, leaving less available for daily functioning.

This is part of why fatigue can feel so deep and unrelenting.

The Role of Chronic Pain

Pain doesn’t just hurt. It drains energy.

Chronic pain:

  • Activates stress pathways

  • Disrupts sleep

  • Increases muscle tension

  • Alters hormone regulation

Over time, the body spends a significant amount of energy just managing discomfort.

That’s why fatigue and chronic pain often go hand in hand. It’s not a coincidence. It’s physiology.

For many veterans dealing with long-term injuries or musculoskeletal issues, this becomes a major contributor to ongoing exhaustion.

Medications Can Add to the Problem

Some commonly prescribed medications may also contribute to fatigue.

These can include:

  • Certain antidepressants

  • Blood pressure medications

  • Pain medications

  • Sleep aids

This doesn’t mean these medications are harmful or unnecessary. They often play an important role in treatment. But they can alter how the brain and body regulate energy.

That’s why medication review is an important part of evaluating chronic fatigue.

Hormones and Metabolic Health

Hormones play a huge role in energy levels.

Fatigue can be influenced by:

  • Thyroid function

  • Testosterone levels

  • Insulin resistance

  • Cortisol rhythm

  • Vitamin D levels

Even when lab values fall within the “normal” range, subtle imbalances can still exist. The body doesn’t operate in strict on-or-off modes. It works on a spectrum.

For example, slightly low testosterone or borderline vitamin D deficiency may not trigger a diagnosis, but can still affect how you feel day to day.

This adds another layer to why veterans are always tired. It’s not always a clear-cut issue.

When to Rule Out Serious Conditions

Persistent fatigue should always be evaluated medically, especially if it’s worsening or unexplained.

Some conditions that may need to be ruled out include:

  • Anemia

  • Thyroid disorders

  • Sleep apnea

  • Heart conditions

  • Autoimmune diseases

  • Chronic infections

Sleep apnea, in particular, is very common and often underdiagnosed, especially in veteran populations.

Once serious conditions are ruled out, fatigue is often linked to regulatory imbalances rather than structural disease.

Fatigue and VA Disability

From a VA disability perspective, fatigue is usually not rated on its own.

Instead, it’s evaluated as part of an underlying condition, such as:

  • Sleep disorders

  • PTSD

  • Chronic pain conditions

  • Autoimmune diseases

  • Endocrine disorders

In some cases, it may be rated under chronic fatigue syndrome, but that requires specific criteria.

What matters most medically and for evaluation purposes is:

  • Whether the fatigue is chronic

  • Whether there is a diagnosable condition

  • Whether it causes functional impairment

  • Whether there is a clear physiological explanation

Understanding the medical basis of fatigue helps clarify how it may be documented and evaluated.

Why This Is So Hard to Untangle

One of the most frustrating parts of chronic fatigue is how complex it is.

It’s rarely caused by a single issue. Instead, it’s usually a combination of factors:

  • Poor sleep

  • Chronic stress

  • Pain

  • Inflammation

  • Hormonal shifts

  • Physical deconditioning

When these stack together, energy levels can collapse.

This complexity is exactly why veterans are always tired. It’s not about laziness or lack of motivation. It’s about how multiple systems in the body are interacting and, in many cases, working against each other.

The Bigger Picture

Fatigue is not just physical. It reflects both the current state of the body and the history it has been through.

Long-term stress, environmental exposure, physical strain, and emotional challenges all leave an imprint. Over time, the body adapts in ways that can make energy regulation less efficient.

Understanding this helps shift the perspective from blame to biology.

Final Thoughts

If you’ve been dealing with chronic fatigue, you’re not alone. And more importantly, it’s not “just in your head.”

There are real physiological reasons behind why veterans are always tired, and those reasons are often layered and interconnected.

The key takeaway is this: fatigue is complex, but it is also explainable.

If your energy levels are persistently low or getting worse, it’s important to follow up with a qualified medical professional. Proper evaluation can help identify contributing factors and guide the right approach to treatment.

Every case is different, and getting personalized care makes a big difference.

Also Read: Anemia and VA Disability

At Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting, a veteran-owned company, we specialize in Independent Medical Opinions (IMOs) known as Nexus letters.

Our purpose is to empower YOU, the veteran, to take charge of your medical evidence and provide you with valuable educational tools and research to guide you on your journey.

Understanding the unique challenges veterans face, our commitment lies in delivering exceptional service and support.

Leveraging an extensive network of licensed independent medical professionals, all well-versed in the medical professional aspects of the VA claims process, we review the necessary medical evidence to incorporate in our reports related to your VA Disability Claim.

Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting is not a law firm, accredited claims agent, or affiliated with the Veterans Administration or Veterans Services Organizations. However, we are happy to discuss your case with your accredited VA legal professional.

Picture of Alan Bucholz, PA-C

Alan Bucholz, PA-C

Board-Certified Physician Assistant | U.S. Army Combat Veteran | Co-founder & CFO, Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting

This article was medically reviewed and fact checked by Alan Bucholz, PA-C, a board-certified Physician Assistant and retired U.S. Army combat veteran with experience in emergency medicine and two combat deployments (Iraq & Afghanistan). As Co-founder of Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting, Alan provides evidence-based medical opinions to support veterans’ VA disability claims with accuracy, compliance, and ethics.

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ALAN BUCHOLZ, PA-C:

U.S ARMY VETERAN, CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

Alan enlisted in the US Army as a combat medic, where he deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Influenced by his time as a combat medic, he attended the Interservice Physician Assistant program while on
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wife, Leah Bucholz, a Physician Assistant and Army Combat Veteran.  He has devoted himself to using his
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Alan Bucholz

ALAN BUCHOLZ, PA-C:

U.S ARMY VETERAN, CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

Alan enlisted in the US Army as a combat medic, where he deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Influenced by his time as a combat medic, he attended the Interservice Physician Assistant program while on
active duty, was commissioned as an officer, and subsequently deployed to Afghanistan.  

Alan’s military and medical background inspired him to form Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting with his
wife, Leah Bucholz, a Physician Assistant and Army Combat Veteran.  He has devoted himself to using his
knowledge gained in the military as a medical professional to serve the Veteran community.

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JULIE PEREIRA:

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

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Alan enlisted in the US Army as a combat medic, where he deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Influenced by his time as a combat medic, he attended the Interservice Physician Assistant program while on
active duty, was commissioned as an officer, and subsequently deployed to Afghanistan.  

Alan’s military and medical background inspired him to form Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting with his
wife, Leah Bucholz, a Physician Assistant and Army Combat Veteran.  He has devoted himself to using his
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Meet Leah, the founder, and leader of our organization. ​​A combat veteran herself, she understands the unique challenges veterans face, making her mission about much more than running a successful business. It’s about the opportunity to provide a legacy of exceptional service for our heroes.​

​“It is essential to remember that there is no greater honor than caring for service members on the battlefield. Continuing to care for Veterans after separation is an opportunity that I have been afforded to extend that care in this new battlefield related to service-incurred disabilities.”

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