QUICK ANSWER
Soldiers exposed to weapons fire, artillery and vehicle noise without adequate hearing protection can develop noise-induced hearing loss and tinnitus. Compensation under the Judicial College Guidelines ranges from around £6,970 for mild loss to £82,030 for total deafness with severe tinnitus. Civil claims against the Ministry of Defence cover qualifying service from 15 May 1987 onwards, with a 3-year time limit from your date of knowledge under the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973. Scottish Claims Helpline works on a no win no fee basis — complete the short form for a free assessment.
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Suffering From Hearing Loss After Army Service? You Could Be Owed Thousands.
Few careers expose people to as much damaging noise as army service. Weapons training, live firing, artillery and mortars, armoured vehicles, explosives and aircraft all generate noise far above safe levels — and for years hearing protection was inadequate, inconsistent, or simply not provided. The result, for many soldiers and veterans, is permanent noise-induced hearing loss and tinnitus.
The damage is cumulative and irreversible. Many veterans only notice the extent of their hearing loss years after leaving, struggling to follow conversations or living with constant ringing in the ears that disrupts sleep. If the Ministry of Defence failed in its duty to protect your hearing during qualifying service, you may be entitled to claim.
Scottish Claims Helpline handles military hearing loss claims across Scotland on a no win no fee basis. There is no financial risk to you.
Do these sound familiar?
- Asking people to repeat themselves, especially in company
- Being told the TV or radio is too loud
- Struggling to follow conversation in pubs, cafés or busy rooms
- Relying on subtitles or lip reading more than you used to
- A ringing or buzzing in your ears on top of the hearing loss
If several of these sound familiar, it costs nothing to find out whether you can claim.
The law moved decisively in veterans’ favour in April 2026, when the High Court handed down judgment in the military deafness group litigation, Abbott & Others v Ministry of Defence. The MoD had already conceded its defences on limitation, breach of duty and combat immunity, and the court settled how military hearing loss is diagnosed and valued in claimants’ favour — replacing methods designed for factory noise with a standard built for weapons fire and military exposure. Claims are now faster, more certain and harder for the MoD to contest. If you were told in the past that you had no claim, it is worth being reassessed.
How Much Could You Receive?
| Severity | Typical Award |
| Total deafness and severe tinnitus | £42,730 - £82,030 |
| Severe bilateral hearing loss with tinnitus | £14,900 - £42,730 |
| Moderate hearing loss with some tinnitus | £6,970 - £14,900 |
| Mild hearing loss | £6,970 - £11,290 |
Based on Judicial College Guidelines for general damages (pain, suffering and loss of amenity). Mainly suffering from ringing or buzzing in your ears rather than hearing loss? See our dedicated Army Tinnitus Claims page.
That’s not all. A civil claim can also include special damages on top of the figures above — the cost of hearing aids (including future replacements and batteries), any lost earnings, and other expenses linked to the condition. A civil claim runs separately from any Armed Forces Compensation Scheme or War Pension award you may already receive.
Who Can Claim?
Serving soldiers and army veterans who developed hearing loss or tinnitus through service noise can claim, provided their qualifying service fell on or after 15 May 1987. This includes regular and reserve personnel across the infantry, artillery, armoured corps, engineers and supporting arms. Service before 15 May 1987 is generally barred by Crown immunity, though the MoD’s recent matrix agreement applies a discount factor where service straddled that date, and the War Pension Scheme remains available for earlier service.
Army Hearing Loss Claims — Frequently Asked Questions
Army hearing loss compensation under the Judicial College Guidelines ranges from around £6,970 for mild noise-induced hearing loss to £82,030 for total deafness with severe tinnitus. Moderate bilateral hearing loss with tinnitus typically attracts £14,900–£42,730. A civil claim against the Ministry of Defence can also include special damages for hearing aids and lost earnings, and runs separately from any Armed Forces Compensation Scheme award.
The main causes are weapons firing and live-fire training without adequate hearing protection, artillery and mortar fire, armoured and heavy vehicle noise, explosives and demolition work, and aircraft and generator noise on operations. Noise-induced hearing loss develops gradually from repeated exposure and is cumulative and irreversible. Acoustic shock from sudden loud blasts can also cause tinnitus.
Service from 15 May 1987 onwards is fully claimable. Earlier service has historically been barred by Crown immunity under the Crown Proceedings Act 1947, but the position improved dramatically in April 2026 when the High Court handed down judgment in the military deafness group litigation, Abbott & Others v Ministry of Defence. The MoD had already conceded its defences on limitation, breach of duty and combat immunity, and where some service fell before the cut-off but continued afterwards a discount matrix applies to the earlier period. The War Pension Scheme remains available for earlier service. If you are unsure what qualifies, do not rule yourself out — the assessment is free.
The Armed Forces Compensation Scheme (AFCS) covers injury or illness caused by service on or after 6 April 2005 and is a separate, no-fault government scheme. A civil claim against the MoD for negligence is a different route and can be pursued alongside it. We can advise on a civil noise-induced hearing loss claim; AFCS and War Pension applications are handled through Veterans UK.
3 years from your date of knowledge under the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973 — not from the date of service. The date of knowledge is usually when an audiogram or ENT report first links your hearing loss to service noise. This means veterans diagnosed long after leaving the army can still bring a claim for qualifying service. Contact us as soon as possible so the time limit does not pass.
Yes. The key evidence is an audiogram showing the pattern of your hearing loss and an ENT specialist report linking it to noise exposure. Noise-induced hearing loss has a distinctive signature — a notch in hearing sensitivity around 4kHz. Your service medical records and any hearing tests carried out during service also help. Your solicitor arranges the assessments as part of a no win no fee claim.
How Do I Start My Claim?
It takes 2 minutes. Fill in our short form and one of our specialist Scottish solicitors will call you back at a time that suits. They will listen to what happened, tell you straight away if you have a claim, and explain exactly how much you could receive — all completely free and with no obligation. If you decide to go ahead, everything is handled for you on a no win no fee basis from start to finish. You pay nothing unless you win.
Could You Be Owed Compensation?
Check My Eligibility
A solicitor will call you back. Free, no obligation.
About this page: Written by
David Gildea, Scottish Claims Helpline. Last reviewed: May 2026. Scottish Claims Helpline is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (
FRN 830381).