A security clearance Report of Investigation (ROI) is one of the most important—and least understood—documents in the entire clearance process.

Most applicants never see it.

But it is the document that:

  • summarizes your background investigation
  • organizes the evidence about you
  • forms the basis for adjudication
  • ultimately leads to a Statement of Reasons (SOR), if concerns exist

If you receive an SOR, it is not built from memory.

It is built from the ROI.

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 reports from inside the system and understand exactly how they are used to evaluate clearance cases.

If you are navigating this stage, begin with the
👉 Security Clearance Statement of Reasons Resource Hub


What the Report of Investigation Actually Is

The Report of Investigation is a compiled record of everything investigators gathered about you during the clearance process.

It includes:

  • your SF-86 disclosures
  • summaries of your subject interview
  • third-party interview summaries
  • financial and criminal records
  • foreign contact information
  • investigator notes and findings

It is not a verbatim transcript.

It is a structured summary of information relevant to adjudication.


The Most Important Reality About the ROI

👉 The ROI is not your story.
👉 It is the government’s version of your record.

That distinction matters.

Because adjudicators do not evaluate:

  • what you remember saying
  • what you intended

They evaluate:

👉 what is documented in the ROI


How the ROI Is Created

Step 1: Data Collection

Investigators gather information from:

  • your SF-86
  • government databases
  • financial records
  • criminal records
  • employment verification

Step 2: Subject Interview

During your interview, investigators:

  • ask clarifying questions
  • explore potential concerns
  • document your responses

Important:

👉 your answers are summarized—not recorded word-for-word


Step 3: Third-Party Interviews

Investigators may speak with:

  • employers
  • coworkers
  • neighbors
  • references

These interviews are used to:

  • verify your statements
  • identify discrepancies
  • assess patterns

Step 4: Compilation Into the ROI

All information is compiled into a single report.

This includes:

  • summaries of statements
  • documentation of issues
  • relevant findings

This compiled document becomes:

👉 the foundation of your clearance record


What the ROI Contains (In Practice)

A typical ROI may include:

  • employment timelines
  • financial account summaries
  • descriptions of incidents
  • summaries of interviews
  • investigator observations

But critically:

👉 it reflects how the investigator interpreted the information

Not just the information itself.


Why the ROI Matters More Than You Think

Most applicants believe:

“My case is about what actually happened.”

In reality:

👉 your case is about what the ROI says happened

Because the ROI:

  • is what adjudicators review
  • is what SOR allegations are based on
  • is what hearings rely on
  • is what future investigations may reference

How the ROI Leads to a Statement of Reasons

After reviewing the ROI, adjudicators ask:

  • Are there unresolved concerns?
  • Are there inconsistencies?
  • Is mitigation sufficient?

If the answer is unclear:

👉 a Statement of Reasons is issued

The SOR is not new information.

It is:

👉 selected concerns pulled from the ROI


Where Problems Typically Arise in the ROI

1. Summary vs Reality

Because interviews are summarized:

  • nuance may be lost
  • wording may differ
  • context may be reduced

2. Inconsistencies Across Sources

Differences between:

  • SF-86 disclosures
  • interview statements
  • third-party accounts

can trigger:

👉 Guideline E — Personal Conduct


3. Unresolved Issues

If the ROI shows:

  • ongoing debt
  • unclear timelines
  • incomplete resolution

this can trigger:

👉 Guideline F — Financial Considerations


4. Pattern Development

Investigators organize information into:

  • patterns
  • timelines
  • repeated conduct

Patterns carry more weight than isolated events.


The Hidden Risk: You Don’t Control the ROI

One of the most important realities:

👉 you do not control how your statements are summarized

Once something is included in the ROI:

  • it becomes part of your permanent record
  • it is difficult to change
  • it may be reused later

Why the ROI Shapes Your Entire Case

If you receive an SOR, your response is not starting fresh.

You are responding to:

👉 the ROI

This means:

  • your response must align with what is already documented
  • inconsistencies must be handled carefully
  • mitigation must be clearly established

How to Access Your ROI

In some cases, you may be able to request your investigative file through:

  • FOIA (Freedom of Information Act)
  • Privacy Act requests

However:

  • access may be limited
  • redactions are common
  • timing may not align with your response deadline

See How ROI Evidence Becomes an SOR

To understand how investigative records are translated into formal allegations, review:

👉 Security Clearance Statement of Reasons Examples


When It Makes Sense to Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer

If your case involves:

  • inconsistencies in the record
  • unclear investigator summaries
  • multiple sources of conflicting information

It is important to understand how the ROI is being interpreted.

A security clearance lawyer helps:

  • analyze the underlying record
  • identify risks in the ROI
  • structure your response accordingly
  • avoid creating new inconsistencies

To understand how SOR lawyers approach this stage, see:

👉 Security Clearance Statement of Reasons (SOR) Lawyer


Why National Security Law Firm Is Different

Security clearance cases are decided inside a federal system.

National Security Law Firm is built specifically for that system.

Insider Experience

Our attorneys include:

  • former adjudicators
  • former administrative judges
  • former DOHA attorneys

Attorney Review Board

Cases are reviewed through our
👉 Attorney Review Board


Record Control Strategy

Every statement becomes part of your permanent file.

We structure responses using
👉 record control strategy


FAQs About the Report of Investigation

What is the ROI in a security clearance case?

It is the compiled report of your background investigation used by adjudicators to evaluate your eligibility.


Do I get to see my ROI?

Sometimes, through FOIA or Privacy Act requests, but access may be limited.


Is the ROI accurate?

It reflects investigator summaries, which may not include full context.


Why does the ROI matter so much?

Because it forms the foundation of your clearance record and any SOR that follows.


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer About Your SOR

If you are dealing with a Statement of Reasons, understanding the underlying record is critical.

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.