If You Don’t Understand How the Adjudicative Guidelines Are Applied, You Don’t Understand Why Clearance Cases Are Won or Lost

Most people believe security clearance decisions are based on:

  • whether something bad happened

  • how serious the issue was

  • whether they can explain it

That is not how the system works.

Security clearance decisions are not made by checking boxes or weighing isolated facts.

They are made inside a structured federal system that asks one question:

Can this person be trusted with access to classified information without creating unacceptable risk?

Everything—every guideline, every fact, every explanation—is evaluated through that lens.

If you don’t understand how that evaluation actually happens, you cannot predict outcomes, and you cannot build a case that will succeed.


Security Clearance Adjudicative Guidelines (Quick Answer)

The security clearance adjudicative guidelines are the framework used by the U.S. government to evaluate whether granting access to classified information is clearly consistent with national security.

Adjudicators do not decide cases based on isolated facts. They evaluate:

  • credibility across all disclosures

  • whether risk has been fully resolved

  • patterns of behavior over time

  • whether approval can be defended in future reviews

Most clearance cases are decided not by the issue itself, but by how the record reflects risk, mitigation, and consistency.


Where You Are in the Clearance Process

The adjudicative guidelines appear throughout the clearance lifecycle:

  • SF-86 disclosures

  • background investigation

  • follow-up inquiries

  • Statement of Reasons

  • hearings and appeals

To understand how the full system works from start to finish, see the

Security Clearance Insiders Resource Hub

For a step-by-step breakdown of how cases move through the system, see the

security clearance process guide


What the Adjudicative Guidelines Actually Are

The Adjudicative Guidelines are the framework the government uses to evaluate eligibility for access to classified information.

There are thirteen categories, covering areas like:

  • financial issues

  • foreign influence

  • criminal conduct

  • personal conduct

  • substance use

But the guidelines themselves do not decide cases.

They are simply the structure used to organize risk.

Two people can trigger the same guideline and receive completely different outcomes.

The difference is not the guideline.

It is how the guideline is applied.

To see a full breakdown of how each guideline works, including real-world examples and mitigation strategies, start with the individual guideline guides below.


How Security Clearance Decisions Are Actually Made

Most people assume decisions are based on:

  • the severity of the issue

  • whether they can explain it

  • whether the government is “right”

That is not how adjudication works.

Decisions are made by applying the guidelines to a structured risk analysis.

To understand that process in depth, see:

How Security Clearance Adjudicators Actually Decide Cases


The Standard That Controls Every Decision

Every clearance decision is governed by one standard:

“Clearly consistent with the interests of national security.”

This is not a legal technicality.

It is the entire case.

Decision-makers are not asking:

  • “Did this person make a mistake?”

  • “Is this person generally good?”

They are asking:

“If I approve this clearance, can I defend that decision later?”

If the answer is not clearly yes, the case fails.

For a deeper breakdown of how this standard is interpreted and applied in real cases, see:

What “Clearly Consistent with National Security” Really Means 


How Security Clearance Adjudication Actually Works

The process looks straightforward from the outside:

  • investigation

  • identification of issues

  • review under the guidelines

  • decision

But inside the system, something different is happening.

Adjudicators are not just evaluating facts.

They are evaluating:

  • patterns over time

  • consistency across statements

  • credibility under scrutiny

  • whether the risk has truly been resolved

This is why cases that appear “similar” often result in different outcomes.

Because the system is not comparing events.

It is evaluating records.

For a detailed breakdown of how this process unfolds step-by-step, see:

How Security Clearance Adjudication Works


The Three Factors That Actually Drive Outcomes

Every clearance decision—no matter the guideline—comes down to three things:


1. Credibility

Are the applicant’s statements consistent across:

  • the SF-86

  • investigator interviews

  • written submissions

  • testimony

Even small inconsistencies can create doubt.

And doubt is risk.


2. Mitigation

Has the issue been resolved in a way that:

  • eliminates the concern

  • prevents recurrence

  • demonstrates judgment

Explaining what happened is not enough.

The system is looking for proof that it will not happen again.


3. Time and Pattern

Adjudicators care less about what happened once and more about:

  • whether the behavior is recent

  • whether it is part of a pattern

  • whether it has stabilized over time

This is why:

recent conduct matters more than old conduct

and why:

time is one of the most powerful mitigation factors in clearance cases.

For a deeper explanation of how timing affects outcomes, see:

How Time Affects Security Clearance Decisions (Why Recent Conduct Matters Most)


What Do Security Clearance Adjudicators Actually Look For?

Security clearance adjudicators evaluate whether an applicant can be trusted with access to classified information without creating unacceptable risk.

They focus on:

  • whether the issue is resolved—not just explained

  • whether the record is consistent across all stages

  • whether behavior shows long-term stability

  • whether the case would survive future review

Adjudicators are not deciding whether someone is a good person.

They are deciding whether approving the clearance is a defensible decision.


Why Most Clearance Cases Involve Multiple Guidelines

In real cases, issues rarely exist in isolation.

A financial problem may raise:

  • financial concerns (Guideline F)

  • credibility concerns (Guideline E)

Foreign contacts may trigger:

  • foreign influence (Guideline B)

  • personal conduct issues if not disclosed

Adjudicators do not evaluate these issues separately.

They evaluate how they interact.

This is one of the most common points where cases are lost.

For a full breakdown of how multiple guidelines interact and affect outcomes, see:

What Happens When Multiple Adjudicative Guidelines Apply 


The Whole Person Concept: Why “One Mistake” Is Never Just One Mistake

The guidelines are applied through what is known as the Whole Person Concept.

This means:

  • no single issue decides the case

  • the entire record is evaluated

  • all behavior is considered together

This is why:

good people lose clearance cases

and why:

serious issues can sometimes be overcome

To understand how the Whole Person Concept actually works in practice, see:

The Whole Person Concept in Security Clearance Decisions


Why Similar Cases Get Different Outcomes

Two people can have:

  • the same issue

  • similar facts

  • comparable backgrounds

And still receive different outcomes.

Because:

the system is not comparing facts—it is evaluating records

Differences in:

  • timing

  • documentation

  • disclosure

  • credibility

can completely change how a case is interpreted.

For a deeper explanation of why outcomes vary so dramatically, see:

Why Two People With the Same Problem Get Different Clearance Decisions 


What Actually Disqualifies You From a Security Clearance

There is no single disqualifying factor.

But certain patterns consistently lead to denial:

  • unresolved financial instability

  • dishonesty or omissions

  • recent criminal conduct

  • foreign influence concerns without mitigation

  • behavior that suggests poor judgment

For a complete breakdown of disqualifying factors and how they are evaluated, see:

What Disqualifies You From a Security Clearance? (Full Breakdown)

There is no single automatic disqualifier.

Clearances are denied when issues create unresolved risk, including:

  • financial instability

  • lack of candor or inconsistent disclosures

  • recent criminal conduct

  • foreign influence concerns

  • patterns of poor judgment

The key factor is not whether something happened, but whether the issue still presents risk today.


Understanding the Guidelines Is Only Half the Equation

Most content stops here.

It explains the guidelines and leaves you with the impression that understanding them is enough.

It is not.

Understanding the guidelines explains:

  • why a decision was made

It does not explain:

  • how to change the outcome

Because the guidelines do not tell you how to fix a case.

They only tell you how the case is evaluated.

To see how clearance issues are actually resolved in practice, including guideline-specific strategies, see:

How Security Clearance Problems Are Actually Fixed


The 13 Adjudicative Guidelines

Each guideline addresses a category of risk:

Each guideline has:

  • disqualifying conditions
  • mitigating conditions
  • interpretation standards

Why National Security Law Firm Is Different

Security clearance cases are decided inside a federal system.

At National Security Law Firm:

  • our attorneys include former adjudicators, administrative judges, and DOHA attorneys

  • we understand how decisions are made internally

  • we structure cases based on how the government evaluates risk

We do not just explain the guidelines.

We apply them the way decision-makers do.


Before You Move Forward

The most important question is not:

👉 “Which guideline applies?”

It is:

👉 “Can this issue be resolved in a way that supports approval?”


Security Clearance Resource Navigation

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Security Clearance Adjudicative Guidelines FAQs


What are the adjudicative guidelines for security clearance?

They are 13 categories used by the government to evaluate whether granting a clearance is clearly consistent with national security.


How do adjudicators decide security clearance cases?

They evaluate risk, credibility, mitigation, and whether the record supports approval—not just the facts of what happened.


What is the most important factor in a clearance decision?

Consistency and credibility across the entire record are often more important than the underlying issue itself.


Can you get a clearance with past problems?

Yes, if the issue is fully mitigated and does not create ongoing risk.


What is the “Whole Person Concept”?

It means adjudicators evaluate the entire record—not just one issue—when making a decision.


What disqualifies you from a security clearance?

Unresolved risk, especially involving financial issues, dishonesty, criminal conduct, or foreign influence.


Why do similar cases have different outcomes?

Because adjudicators evaluate patterns, timing, and credibility—not just isolated facts.


Adjudicative Guidelines Resource Library: How Clearance Decisions Are Actually Made

Understanding the adjudicative guidelines requires more than knowing what each rule says.

It requires understanding:

  • how adjudicators apply them

  • how multiple issues interact

  • how risk is evaluated over time

  • and how real cases are decided inside the system

The following resources break down each part of that process:


Core Authority: How Decisions Are Made


Decision Framework: How the System Operates


How the Guidelines Are Applied in Real Cases


How Adjudicators Actually Think


From Guidelines to Strategy: What Happens Next


Complete Adjudicative Guidelines (A–M)


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer Who Understands How the Guidelines Are Actually Applied

If your case involves one or more adjudicative guidelines, the most important step is:

👉 understanding how they will be interpreted

We offer free, confidential consultations to help you:

  • understand your risk
  • evaluate your case
  • and build a strategy that aligns with the guidelines

👉 Book your consultation


The Record Controls the Case.

SECURITY CLEARANCE DENIED OR REVOKED

If you are appealing a security clearance determination, it is imperative that you obtain experienced legal representation. Doing so will provide you with the best opportunity to obtain or maintain your clearance.

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