2025 NDAA Draft Includes Major Pay Raise For Junior Troops
UPDATE: 12/19/2024: The House and Senate have both passed the 2025 NDAA. The act includes a 14.5 percent pay raise for most junior enlisted and a 4.5 percent pay raise for all service members. The act now goes to the President’s desk for signature or veto. We preserve the article below for historical purposes and context. It has been updated and revised in some sections.
Related: Active Duty Military Benefits Guide
2025 NDAA Draft Proposal Includes Major Pay Raise
The House Armed Services Committee has presented a draft of the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act that includes a proposed 4.5% pay raise for military members and a proposed 14.5% pay increase for junior enlisted members. stages at the time of this writing and is not a done deal.
Related: Active Duty Military Benefits Guide
Factors Affecting the 2025 NDAA Military Pay Issue
Early proposals like these don’t always include a mechanism for implementing the reforms, and often, the earliest proposals are significantly modified later. At press time it was not clear whether the 14.5% pay raise would survive the approval process. It did.
The Rising Tide Lifts All Boats?
The 14.5% pay increase idea was originally raised after a private study showed military pay lagging behind civilian pay and inflation. And junior troops are often the most hurt by this disparity.
However, raising junior troops’ pay by such an amount means doing some logistical juggling to ensure that mid-level enlisted troops are also fairly compensated and not being outpaid by their junior enlisted peers.
Under the current proposal, instead of raising the pay of the entire enlisted force by the same percentage, junior enlisted members would (according to the draft) get 14.5% while the rest of the force receives 4.5%.
Does that arrangement create a pay issue for mid-career enlisted? Does the DoD have to restructure the pay chart to make sure junior troops don’t get paid more than their immediate supervisors?
These are issues future defense spending proposals must contend with where military pay increases are concerned when this article was originally written.
Final Draft?
As other publications including Military Times have noted, some in the Senate want to take a good look at military pay and benefits for 2025, but “they have not fully endorsed the House plan yet. The Senate Armed Services Committee is expected to work on its version of the NDAA next month.”
In other words, it’s promising that lawmakers are being more proactive about military pay and benefits for 2025 than they were for 2024, but there is much work (and likely many revisions) of defense spending proposals to come.
The Senate had not publicized specific details of its own NDAA for 2025 at the time this article was originally written, but this was a developing story. At press time the 2025 NDAA debate in the House was scheduled for the week of May 20, 2024.
Related: Active Duty Military Benefits Guide
About the author
Editor-in-Chief Joe Wallace is a 13-year veteran of the United States Air Force and a former reporter/editor for Air Force Television News and the Pentagon Channel. His freelance work includes contract work for Motorola, VALoans.com, and Credit Karma. He is co-founder of Dim Art House in Springfield, Illinois, and spends his non-writing time as an abstract painter, independent publisher, and occasional filmmaker.