Joining the military is a big commitment, not to be taken lightly. Most first-term enlistments require a commitment to four years of active duty and two years of inactive (Individual Ready Reserve, or IRR). But the services also offer programs with two-, three- and six-year active-duty or reserve enlistments. It depends upon the service and the job you want.
Joining the military is a big commitment, not to be taken lightly. Most first-term enlistments require a commitment to four years of active duty and two years of inactive (Individual Ready Reserve, or IRR). But the services also offer programs with two-, three- and six-year active-duty or reserve enlistments. It depends upon the service and the job you want.
1. Get It in Writing
Upon enlisting, you sign an enlistment contract that determines your initial commitment, bonuses, job training guarantees and other incentives. Make sure it's right.
2. Training Commitments
The military offers a variety of advanced training programs. Some require additional service commitments, which may run simultaneously with existing obligations. Some require additional active-duty time.
3. Permanent Change of Station Commitments
Moving is a part of military life, and it costs the government money. If you have served more than two years, a PCS move may require you to accept an additional service obligation. This usually can be done through an extension to your current enlistment.
4. Reenlistment
You will have plenty of opportunities to extend your stay in the military. Services offer an additional bonus to people who reenlist with high-demand skills. The reenlistment commitment will vary with the size of the bonus.
5. Officer Commitments
Like all other commitments, they vary. A standard commitment for service academy graduates who do not receive rated follow-on training is five years. Graduates who accept pilot training are committed to active duty for nine years. ROTC also generally requires a five-year payback while other active-duty commissioning programs usually require a minimum of three years.
6. Getting Out of Your Commitment
Getting out of a contract is difficult. The degree of difficulty varies with the needs of the nation and the availability of talent in your chosen career field. Simply put, plan on fulfilling your commitment.
7. Commitment Phobia
You can serve your country without making any full-time commitment and receive many of the same benefits. In the Reserve and National Guard, your obligation is generally one weekend a month, plus two weeks of active duty a year.
The Army Guard and Air National Guard offer the "Try-One" enlistment option to active-duty veterans and all prior service individuals who are joining the Guard for the first time. This program lets you try the Guard for one year without additional commitment.
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