Most Applicants Think Time Fixes Problems. The System Doesn’t Work That Way.

Most people believe time is their ally in a security clearance case.

They assume:

  • “This happened years ago, so it shouldn’t matter anymore.”

  • “I’ve moved on, so the issue should be behind me.”

  • “As long as enough time has passed, I’ll be fine.”

That assumption is one of the most common—and most costly—misunderstandings in the clearance process.

Because inside the system, time does not erase problems.

👉 Time only matters if it proves something.

At National Security Law Firm, our attorneys include former adjudicators, administrative judges, and attorneys who have worked inside the Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals. We have evaluated how time is interpreted in real cases from the government’s side.

From that perspective, one principle governs outcomes:

👉 Adjudicators do not measure how long ago something happened.

They measure what your behavior over time proves about future risk.

To understand how this fits within the broader framework, see the

Security Clearance Adjudicative Guidelines Explained


Quick Answer: Why Recent Conduct Matters Most

Adjudicators prioritize recent behavior because it is the most reliable indicator of future risk.

Older issues can be mitigated if:

  • behavior has clearly changed

  • patterns have stabilized

  • no new concerns have emerged

But recent conduct—even if minor—can outweigh older, more serious issues because it suggests:

👉 the behavior may still be ongoing or unresolved


Where Time Is Evaluated in the Clearance Process

Time is evaluated continuously throughout the process:

This is not a one-time assessment.

It is an evolving interpretation of your record.

For a full breakdown of how cases move through the system, see the

security clearance process guide


What Applicants Think vs What Adjudicators Evaluate

Applicants think:

  • time reduces risk

  • old issues carry less weight

  • distance from the event equals mitigation

Adjudicators evaluate:

  • whether behavior has changed consistently over time

  • whether the issue is fully resolved

  • whether recent conduct contradicts past mitigation

  • whether patterns suggest future recurrence

This is why:

👉 a ten-year-old issue can be harmless

👉 but a recent minor issue can trigger denial


How Adjudicators Actually Evaluate Time (Step-by-Step)


Step 1: Establish the Timeline of Conduct

Adjudicators map:

  • when the issue began

  • how long it continued

  • when it ended (if it did)

They are not just identifying events.

They are identifying:

👉 patterns over time


Step 2: Identify Whether the Behavior Is Isolated or Repeated

This is critical.

Adjudicators distinguish between:

  • one-time events

  • recurring behavior

  • patterns under stress

A single event years ago is often less concerning than:

👉 repeated behavior over time—even if less serious


Step 3: Evaluate Recency

This is where most cases turn.

Adjudicators ask:

  • How recent is the conduct?

  • Has enough time passed to demonstrate stability?

  • Has behavior changed—or just paused?

Recent conduct suggests:

👉 unresolved risk

Even if the issue itself is minor.


Step 4: Evaluate What Happened After the Issue

This is often more important than the issue itself.

Adjudicators examine:

  • whether mitigation began immediately or later

  • whether behavior improved consistently

  • whether there were relapses or inconsistencies

This is where timing affects credibility.


Step 5: Evaluate Whether Time Demonstrates Stability

Time only helps if it shows:

  • consistent behavior

  • no recurrence

  • reliable judgment

Time that passes without evidence of change does not help.

It simply creates:

👉 a longer period of uncertainty


Step 6: Make a Forward-Looking Judgment

Finally, adjudicators ask:

👉 “What does this timeline predict about the future?”

They are not rewarding the past.

They are evaluating:

👉 whether the future is predictable and safe


When This Becomes a Real Problem in Your Case

Many applicants rely on time incorrectly.

They believe:

  • “It’s been long enough”

  • “This shouldn’t matter anymore”

But if the record shows:

  • inconsistent behavior

  • delayed mitigation

  • recent related issues

then time works against them.

This is often the point where denial becomes likely.


How Small Timing Issues Turn Into Major Problems

Consider how timing affects perception:

  • paying off debt after receiving an SOR looks reactive

  • disclosing information only when asked raises credibility concerns

  • stopping risky behavior recently may not show stability

Individually, these seem minor.

Together, they signal:

👉 unreliable behavior under pressure


This Is Where Many Applicants Lose Their Case

Applicants focus on the event.

Adjudicators focus on the timeline.

That difference leads to:

  • overconfidence in old mitigation

  • underestimation of recent conduct

  • failure to recognize how patterns are interpreted

This is one of the most common mistakes we see.


The Point Where Time Stops Helping

There is a stage where time no longer improves a case.

It happens when:

  • recent conduct contradicts earlier mitigation

  • patterns continue

  • credibility is weakened

At that point:

👉 time does not reduce risk

👉 it reinforces it

Later arguments rarely change this.

Because the timeline has already been established.


Why Waiting Makes This Worse

Waiting often harms a case because:

  • mitigation appears reactive

  • gaps in behavior create uncertainty

  • inconsistencies accumulate

Every new statement adds to the timeline.

And adjudicators evaluate:

👉 the entire sequence—not just the final explanation


What This Means for Your Strategy

Time is not something you wait for.

It is something you build.

A strong case requires:

  • early mitigation

  • consistent behavior

  • stable documentation

  • alignment across all stages

The goal is not to let time pass.

👉 It is to use time to demonstrate reliability.


Cascading Federal Consequences

Time affects more than clearance decisions.

It impacts:

  • reinvestigations

  • Continuous Evaluation alerts

    Continuous Evaluation

  • employment decisions

  • contractor eligibility

A weak timeline follows you.


Why National Security Law Firm Is Different

Most firms treat time as a passive factor.

National Security Law Firm treats it as a strategic variable.

Our attorneys have evaluated cases inside the system.

We understand:

  • how timelines are interpreted

  • how patterns are inferred

  • how timing affects credibility


Attorney Review Board

Cases are evaluated through our

Attorney Review Board

This ensures multiple perspectives analyze how the timeline will be read.


Record Control Strategy

Time is embedded in the record.

Record Control Strategy

The Record Controls the Case


Security Clearance Resource Hub

For a complete understanding of how timing affects clearance decisions, see the

Security Clearance Insiders Resource Hub


Frequently Asked Questions

Does time fix a security clearance issue?

Only if it demonstrates consistent, stable behavior over time.

Why does recent conduct matter more?

Because it is the best predictor of future behavior.

How much time is enough?

There is no fixed rule. It depends on the issue, pattern, and stability of behavior.

Can old issues still matter?

Yes, if they are part of a pattern or not fully resolved.

What is the biggest mistake people make?

Assuming time alone will fix the problem.


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer Before Time Works Against You

The most important question is not:

👉 “Has enough time passed?”

It is:

👉 “What does my timeline actually show?”

By the time most applicants ask that question:

  • the record is already shaping the outcome

  • patterns have already been inferred

  • credibility impressions have formed

We offer free consultations to help you:

  • understand how your timeline will be evaluated

  • identify risks in your record

  • determine what can still be controlled

schedule a free consultation


The Record Controls the Case.