Our Information and Insights

Up to date practical advice for aspiring service members.

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Emblem of the United States Navy featuring an eagle and anchor.

Navy

Primary Role: Protecting U.S. interests on and from the sea. Mission: To maintain, train, and equip combat-ready naval forces capable of winning...
US_Air_Force_Logo_Solid_Colour

Air Force

Primary Role: Control of air and space through airpower and missile systems. Mission: To fly, fight, and win in air, space, and...
Emblem of the United States Space Force under the Department of the Air Force.

Space Force

Primary Role: Operations in space to protect U.S. and allied interests. Mission: To organize, train, and equip Guardians to conduct global space...
Emblem of the United States Coast Guard with anchors and rope design.

Coast Gaurd

Primary Role: Maritime safety, security, and environmental protection. Mission: To safeguard the Nation’s maritime interests both domestically and internationally. Key Functions: Search...

FAQs

General Service Questions

Active Duty is full-time military service. The Reserve is part-time service under federal control. The National Guard is part-time service under state control (unless federally activated).

Most initial enlistments are 4–6 years of active or reserve service, plus an additional time in the Inactive Ready Reserve (IRR).

Yes, but it requires approval and coordination between branches. This process is called an “interservice transfer.”

Reserve & National Guard

Typically, one weekend per month and two weeks of training annually (“one weekend a month, two weeks a year”).

They receive many of the same benefits (such as GI Bill, healthcare options, retirement points), but some benefits are scaled to part-time service.

State Governors can activate them for emergencies (natural disasters, civil unrest). The President can federalize them for overseas missions.

Pay, Benefits & Education

Yes, members are paid for each drill period, based on rank and time in service.

Members may qualify for the Montgomery GI Bill-Selected Reserve, Post-9/11 GI Bill, tuition assistance, and state-specific Guard education programs.

Yes, after 20 qualifying years of service, members are eligible for retirement pay starting at age 60 (sometimes earlier depending on deployments).

Training & Deployments

Yes, all service members complete the same initial training required for their branch.

Yes, both can be mobilized for combat or support missions abroad.

It varies by mission and branch, but most Reservists and Guardsmen receive advance notice for deployments unless it’s an emergency activation.

Joining & Eligibility

U.S. citizenship or permanent residency, age 17–39 (varies by branch), high school diploma or equivalent, and meeting medical/fitness standards.

Yes, the Reserve and Guard are designed to allow service while pursuing civilian education or employment.

Yes, many prior service members transition into Reserve or Guard components to continue serving part-time.