If you have received a Statement of Reasons (SOR), your first reaction is often confusion.

The document:

  • sounds formal
  • reads more serious than expected
  • includes language that may not match how you understand your situation

Most applicants immediately wonder:

  • Why is it written this way?
  • Why does it sound worse than what actually happened?
  • How do I respond to this?

To answer those questions, you need to understand what an SOR actually is—and how it is constructed inside the federal security clearance system.

At National Security Law Firm, our attorneys include former adjudicators, administrative judges, and Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals (DOHA) attorneys. We have reviewed these documents from inside the system and understand how they are written, interpreted, and evaluated.

If you are new to this stage, you can start with the
👉 Security Clearance Statement of Reasons Resource Hub


What a Statement of Reasons Actually Is

A Statement of Reasons is a formal document issued by the government that explains why your security clearance eligibility is being questioned.

It is not:

  • a neutral summary
  • a request for clarification
  • a casual inquiry

It is:

👉 a structured set of allegations designed to support a potential denial or revocation.

These allegations are evaluated under the
👉 Adjudicative Guidelines
and the
👉 Whole Person Concept


Typical Structure of a Statement of Reasons

Most SORs follow a consistent format.


1. Introduction

The opening section identifies:

  • the applicant
  • the clearance at issue
  • the authority under which the SOR is issued

It will typically state that:

it is not clearly consistent with the national interest to grant or continue eligibility for access to classified information


2. Statement of Concern

This section explains, at a high level:

  • what type of issue is involved
  • why it may present a security risk

It often uses broad language.


3. Allegations (Most Important Section)

This is the core of the SOR.

Allegations are:

  • numbered
  • written in formal language
  • grouped under specific guidelines

Each allegation builds the government’s case.


How to Read a Statement of Reasons Line-by-Line (Annotated Example)

To understand how to respond to a Statement of Reasons, you need to read it the way an adjudicator reads it—not the way it feels at first glance.

Below is a simplified, annotated example showing how each line functions inside the decision-making process.


Sample SOR (With Adjudicator Interpretation)


Guideline F: Financial Considerations

👉 What this tells you:
The entire section will be evaluated under
👉 Guideline F — Financial Considerations

This determines:

  • what counts as a problem
  • what counts as mitigation
  • what evidence is required

Allegation 1:
You have a history of financial difficulties.

👉 What applicants think:
“That’s vague.”

👉 What adjudicators see:
This is a pattern framing statement.

It signals:

  • this is not a one-time issue
  • the government is evaluating long-term reliability

Allegation 2:
Between 2020 and 2023, you accumulated delinquent debts totaling approximately $18,500.

👉 What matters here:

  • timeframe
  • total amount
  • accumulation pattern

👉 What adjudicators are evaluating:

  • whether this was temporary or ongoing
  • whether it reflects poor judgment or instability

Allegation 3:
As of the date of this Statement of Reasons, several debts remain unresolved.

👉 This is the most important sentence in the entire section.

Why?

Because:
👉 unresolved = ongoing risk

Even if:

  • you are making payments
  • the situation is improving

If it is not clearly resolved, adjudicators may still find risk.


Guideline E: Personal Conduct

👉 This is where cases often become more serious.

Now the issue is no longer just financial.

It is about:
👉 credibility


Allegation 4:
You failed to disclose certain financial delinquencies on your SF-86.

👉 What applicants think:
“I forgot.”

👉 What adjudicators evaluate:

  • reliability
  • honesty
  • consistency

This can trigger
👉 Guideline E — Personal Conduct

Which is often harder to mitigate than the original issue.


What This Example Actually Shows

When read correctly, the SOR is not just listing facts.

It is building a case that:

  • the issue exists
  • the issue is ongoing
  • the issue reflects risk
  • the issue may involve credibility concerns

Your response must directly dismantle that structure.


How Applicants Read This vs How Adjudicators Read It

Applicant Perspective

  • “I’ve been paying these debts”
  • “I didn’t mean to leave anything out”
  • “This doesn’t reflect my situation now”

Adjudicator Perspective

  • pattern of instability
  • unresolved concerns
  • inconsistency in disclosure
  • potential future risk

👉 This difference in perspective is where most cases are won or lost.


Why SOR Language Feels Exaggerated

Many applicants feel the SOR:

  • overstates the issue
  • sounds more serious than reality
  • lacks context

That is intentional.

SORs are written to:

  • capture risk broadly
  • include all potentially relevant facts
  • allow adjudicators flexibility

They are not written to:

  • present your side
  • minimize concerns
  • provide balance

Why the Same Situation Can Lead to Different Outcomes

Two applicants can have:

  • similar issues
  • similar backgrounds

But very different outcomes.

Why?

Because adjudicators are not comparing people.

They are evaluating:

👉 the record

This includes:

  • consistency
  • mitigation
  • documentation
  • credibility

What Your Response Must Actually Do

A strong SOR rebuttal must:

  • address each allegation individually
  • align with the applicable guideline
  • provide documented mitigation
  • maintain consistency with prior statements
  • reduce ambiguity

This is where most applicants struggle.


How to Read Your Statement of Reasons Like an Adjudicator

Most applicants read their SOR emotionally.

Adjudicators read it structurally.

If you want to respond effectively, you must shift how you read the document.


Step 1: Identify the Real Issue (Not the Obvious One)

Ask:

👉 What is the government actually concerned about?

Examples:

  • Debt → financial instability
  • Foreign contacts → vulnerability to influence
  • Omission → credibility

The surface issue is rarely the real issue.


Step 2: Look for the “Unresolved” Problem

Adjudicators are not focused on what happened.

They are focused on:

👉 what is still a risk today

Key phrases to look for:

  • “remains unresolved”
  • “ongoing concern”
  • “pattern of behavior”

These indicate where your response must focus.


Step 3: Check for Hidden Guideline E Problems

Even if your SOR is about:

  • finances
  • drugs
  • foreign contacts

Ask:

👉 Are there any inconsistencies?

Because if so, the case may actually be about:

👉 credibility

And credibility issues are often decisive.


Step 4: Identify What Is Missing (This Is Critical)

SORs often omit:

  • positive context
  • explanations
  • improvements

That is intentional.

Your job is not to argue with the SOR.

Your job is to:

👉 fill in what is missing in a way that satisfies mitigation standards


Step 5: Ask the Only Question That Matters

Before writing your response, ask:

👉 Can this record support an approval decision?

Not:

  • “Is this fair?”
  • “Is this accurate?”

But:

👉 Would an adjudicator feel comfortable approving this case based on this record?


Why This Matters Before You Write Your Rebuttal

Most applicants begin writing immediately.

That is where mistakes happen.

Because once your response is submitted:

  • it becomes part of your permanent file
  • it is compared to everything you previously said
  • it may be reused in future investigations and reviews

Understanding how to read your SOR correctly is what allows you to:

  • respond to the actual issue
  • avoid creating new problems
  • present mitigation effectively
  • build a defensible approval record

If You Want to See More Real SOR Patterns

To understand how different types of allegations are written and interpreted across cases, review:

👉 Security Clearance Statement of Reasons Examples


When It Makes Sense to Get Help Interpreting Your SOR

If you are unsure:

  • what the real issue is
  • whether your case involves credibility risk
  • how your record will be interpreted

That is where many applicants make critical mistakes.

A security clearance lawyer can help ensure that:

  • you are responding to the correct issue
  • your response aligns with the adjudicative framework
  • your record supports approval

👉 You can learn more here:
Security Clearance Statement of Reasons (SOR) Lawyer


Before You Respond: Review Real SOR Examples

If you want to better understand how these documents are written and interpreted, review:

👉 Security Clearance Statement of Reasons Examples

That page breaks down:

  • real-world allegation patterns
  • how adjudicators interpret them
  • why some cases fail despite strong facts

When It Makes Sense to Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer

By the time you receive an SOR:

  • the investigation is complete
  • the government has framed its concerns
  • the record has already been partially built

Your response is not just about explaining.

It becomes part of your permanent clearance file.

A security clearance lawyer helps ensure:

  • the response aligns with adjudicative standards
  • mitigation is properly presented
  • credibility issues are avoided
  • the record supports approval

If you want a full breakdown of how SOR lawyers approach these cases, see:

👉 Security Clearance Statement of Reasons (SOR) Lawyer


FAQs About Statement of Reasons Documents

Are all SORs written in this format?

Yes. While details vary, most follow a consistent structure with allegations tied to specific guidelines.


Why does my SOR sound worse than what happened?

Because it is written to capture risk broadly—not to reflect your perspective.


Can I just explain what happened in my response?

Explanation alone is rarely sufficient. Mitigation and consistency are critical.


What is the most important part of the SOR?

The allegations section. That is what must be addressed directly.


Can I ignore parts of the SOR I disagree with?

No. Every allegation must be addressed carefully.


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer About Your SOR

If you have received a Statement of Reasons, the way you respond will shape your clearance record.

You can
👉 schedule a free consultation

National Security Law Firm represents clients nationwide and maintains
👉 4.9-star Google reviews


The Record Controls the Case.