Most People Think the Difficulty Depends on the Issue. It Doesn’t.

When someone faces a security clearance problem, their instinct is to measure how serious it is.

They ask:

  • “How bad is this?”

  • “Is this worse than other cases?”

  • “Do people get cleared with this issue?”

That feels like the right way to think about it.

It isn’t.

Because inside the system, the difficulty of a clearance problem is not determined primarily by the issue itself.

👉 It is determined by how that issue exists inside your record.

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 these cases from inside the system.

From that perspective, one pattern becomes impossible to ignore:

👉 Some serious issues are easy to fix.

Some minor issues are nearly impossible to fix.

The difference is not severity.

It is structure.

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

Security Clearance Adjudicative Guidelines Explained


Quick Answer: Why Some Clearance Issues Are Harder to Fix

A security clearance issue is difficult to fix when it:

  • creates credibility concerns

  • involves inconsistent or evolving explanations

  • interacts with other issues

  • lacks clear resolution over time

  • requires interpretation to approve

An issue is easier to fix when it:

  • is isolated

  • is fully resolved

  • is consistently documented

  • shows stable behavior over time

The key difference is not what happened.

👉 It is whether the record feels stable or uncertain.


Where This Difficulty Actually Develops

Most applicants assume the difficulty of their case begins at adjudication.

It doesn’t.

It develops much earlier:

  • in how they complete the SF-86

  • in how they respond to investigators

  • in how they describe events over time

  • in how quickly they address problems

By the time a case reaches a

Security Clearance Statement of Reasons

the system is not discovering the issue.

It is evaluating how the issue has already been handled.

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

security clearance process guide


What Applicants Think vs What Actually Makes a Case Hard to Fix

Applicants think difficulty comes from:

  • the seriousness of the conduct

  • how recent it was

  • whether others have been approved with similar issues

Adjudicators evaluate difficulty based on:

  • how consistent the record is

  • whether mitigation is complete

  • whether explanations remain stable

  • whether the issue interacts with other concerns

  • whether approval can be defended without doubt

This is why:

👉 a DUI can be resolved

👉 but a disclosure issue can sink a case


The Real Divide: Resolvable Problems vs Structural Problems

The system does not categorize cases as “serious” or “minor.”

It categorizes them—informally—as:

👉 resolvable

👉 or structurally difficult


Resolvable Problems

These tend to involve:

  • a clear event

  • consistent explanation

  • verifiable resolution

  • no conflicting information

For example:

  • a financial issue that is fully paid and documented

  • a past incident with no recurrence and stable behavior afterward

These cases are easier to fix because:

👉 the record can be closed cleanly


Structurally Difficult Problems

These tend to involve:

  • inconsistent disclosures

  • evolving explanations

  • multiple overlapping issues

  • mitigation that appears reactive

  • gaps in documentation

These cases are difficult because:

👉 the record cannot be easily stabilized


How Problems Become Harder Over Time

Most clearance problems do not start out difficult.

They become difficult through how they are handled.

This is where many applicants lose their case.


Step 1: The Issue Appears Manageable

At first:

  • the issue seems minor

  • the explanation feels reasonable

  • the applicant assumes it will not be a major problem


Step 2: The Record Begins to Expand

Then:

  • additional details are added

  • explanations evolve

  • inconsistencies appear

What started as one issue becomes:

👉 multiple points of comparison


Step 3: Credibility Becomes Involved

Now the issue is no longer just about the event.

It is about:

  • how it was disclosed

  • when it was disclosed

  • whether the explanation changed

This is where many cases become difficult.


Step 4: The Issue Interacts With Other Concerns

For example:

  • financial issues + late disclosure → credibility concern

  • foreign contacts + inconsistent reporting → reliability concern

  • past conduct + minimization → judgment concern

This interaction is rarely obvious to the applicant.

But it is central to how the case is evaluated.


Step 5: The Record Requires Interpretation

At this stage, the adjudicator is no longer reading a clear narrative.

They are reading a file that requires:

  • interpretation

  • inference

  • judgment calls

This is the point where cases stop being easy to fix.


This Is Where Many Applicants Lose Their Case

Most applicants continue trying to:

  • explain more

  • clarify details

  • justify behavior

But those efforts often:

  • introduce new inconsistencies

  • expand the record further

  • weaken credibility

What feels like progress becomes:

👉 additional risk signals

This is one of the most common mistakes we see.


The Hidden Factor: Credibility Changes Everything

There is one factor that consistently makes problems harder to fix:

👉 credibility

An issue that would otherwise be manageable becomes difficult when:

  • disclosures are delayed

  • explanations change

  • details are inconsistent

Because once credibility is involved:

👉 every part of the record is affected

Even unrelated issues become harder to mitigate.


The Point Where Cases Become Extremely Difficult to Fix

There is a stage where a case becomes structurally difficult.

It happens when:

  • multiple issues interact

  • credibility is weakened

  • mitigation is incomplete or reactive

  • the record no longer reads cleanly

At that point:

👉 the adjudicator is not asking how to fix the issue

They are asking:

👉 “Can this record be approved at all?”

This is often the point where denial becomes likely.


Why Waiting Makes This Worse

Time does not fix structural problems.

It often makes them worse.

Because:

  • the record continues to grow

  • inconsistencies accumulate

  • mitigation appears reactive

  • patterns become clearer

Most people don’t realize this until it’s too late.


What This Means for Your Case Right Now

If your situation involves:

  • more than one issue

  • inconsistent disclosures

  • explanations that have evolved

  • mitigation that began after questions were raised

then your case is not being evaluated as a simple issue.

It is being evaluated as:

👉 a system of interacting risks

This is the moment where most applicants begin to lose control of their case.


What Actually Makes a Case Easier to Fix

The system responds best to records that are:

  • consistent from the beginning

  • supported by documentation

  • stable over time

  • clearly resolved

Not:

  • explained repeatedly

  • expanded with new details

  • dependent on interpretation

The goal is not to make the issue understandable.

👉 It is to make it non-problematic in the record.


Why National Security Law Firm Is Different

Most firms approach clearance issues individually.

They focus on:

  • the allegation

  • the explanation

  • the response

But that assumes the system evaluates issues separately.

It doesn’t.

Adjudicators evaluate the record as a whole.

That is where cases are actually decided.

At National Security Law Firm, cases are approached from that perspective from the beginning.

Instead of asking:

  • “How do we respond to this issue?”

We ask:

  • “How will this entire record be interpreted when everything is evaluated together?”

That shift changes:

  • how disclosures are framed

  • how mitigation is structured

  • how consistency is maintained

  • how issues are prevented from compounding


Attorney Review Board

Cases are evaluated through our

Attorney Review Board

This mirrors how decisions are actually made inside the system—through layered evaluation.


Record Control Strategy

Clearance cases are not decided by one moment.

They are decided by the record.

Record Control Strategy

The Record Controls the Case


Security Clearance Resource Hub

For a deeper understanding of how issues interact across the clearance system, see the

Security Clearance Insiders Resource Hub


Frequently Asked Questions

Are some clearance issues automatically harder to fix?

No. Difficulty depends on how the issue is documented and interpreted—not just the issue itself.

What makes a case hard to fix?

Inconsistency, credibility concerns, multiple issues, and lack of clear resolution.

Can a minor issue cause denial?

Yes, especially if it creates broader concerns about reliability or judgment.

What is the most important factor?

Whether the record can be read clearly and approved without doubt.

Can explanation fix a difficult case?

No. Only consistency, resolution, and stability can.


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer Before Problems Become Structural

The most important question is not:

👉 “How serious is my issue?”

It is:

👉 “How is my record being interpreted?”

By the time most applicants ask that question:

  • the record is already shaping the outcome

  • issues have begun to interact

  • credibility impressions have formed

We offer free consultations to help you:

  • understand how your case is being evaluated

  • identify where issues are becoming harder to fix

  • determine what can still be controlled

schedule a free consultation


The Record Controls the Case.