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How Military Retirement Pay Works

There are multiple types of military retirement pay plans for those who serve long enough to qualify for military retirement or are given a disability retirement due to medical issues caused or aggravated by military service.

Defense.gov says, “Members who accumulate 20 or more years of active service are eligible for retirement.” That applies to active duty troops.

Members of the Reserve “who accumulate 20 or more years of qualifying service are eligible for reserve retirement when they reach age 60 or, in some cases, a lesser qualifying age.”

Military Retirement Pay Plans and Who Qualifies for Them

Defense.gov notes, “All four of the regular and non-regular retirement plans determine initial monthly retired pay by applying a percentage multiplier to the retired pay base.”

Read more: Blended Retirement System: An Overview

Calculating Time In Service Toward Military Retirement

For active-duty troops, it’s a simple calculation. Take all applicable years of military service “for computation of the retired pay percentage multiplier include all active duty and any credited reserve points divided by 360.”

For members of the Reserve, there are three ways to calculate years of service as they apply toward retirement.

One method is used to determine when the applicant may draw retirement pay, one is for “determining the applicable active duty base pay upon which to compute retired pay,” and one is used for the retired pay percentage multiplier.

Years of Service for Retirement Entitlement

This category includes “each one-year period in which the person has been credited with at least 50 points:”

To qualify for retirement, you must have 20 years of service.

Years of Service (YOS) for Pay Base

When combined with pay grade, YOS for pay base “includes all periods of active service and all periods of Reserve or National Guard service counted day for day.”

This pay base is calculated “as though the reserve member were serving on active duty immediately prior to retirement,” meaning years of service “continue to accumulate even after the member has entered the retired reserve and continue until they actually begin receiving such pay (usually age 60).”

Years of Service for Retired Pay Percentage Multiple

This category of years of service “includes all periods of active service (counted as one point for each day) plus all points earned through qualifying reserve duty, not exceeding annual limits, divided by 360.”

Reserve Retirement Age

Typically, Reservists can’t draw military retirement pay until they reach age 60. Those recalled to active duty may have this age requirement lowered by three months for every 90 days spent on active duty.

Read more: Military Retirement Pay for Guard And Reserve

Military Retirement Pay Charts

There are no military retirement pay charts as such. Instead, your retirement pay is calculated using the formulas specific to each type of plan.

More on the Retired Pay Base

Defense.gov reports there are two ways to determine the military retirement pay base. The Final Pay method and High-36 method both use calculations based in part on the date of entry into military service.

Final Pay “establishes the retired pay base equal to final basic pay,” according to Defense.gov, where High-36 “is the average of the highest 36 months of basic pay divided by 36. This is generally the last three years of service and is sometimes called high-3.”

More on the Retired Pay Multiplier

Final Pay and High-36 retirement pay plans count each year of service as worth 2.5% toward the retirement multiplier.

For the REDUX retirement plan, the DoD states, “the High-36 multiplier is reduced by one percentage point for each year that the member has less than 30 years of service at retirement.“

That means two decades of military service are worth a 40% multiplier. For disability retirement programs, the multiplier is the higher number of

Cost of Living Adjustments

Military retirement pay includes Cost of Living adjustments to protect against rising costs due to inflation. These adjustments are based on changes to the Consumer Price Index though some plans may calculate COLA differently.

Related: Thrift Savings Plan: Everything You Need To Know

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