Have you decided to make the military a career?  Great!  You should consider and do some planning around the military pension you’ll receive after retiring.  If you are deciding whether or not to get out of the military, you should consider what your military pension could be if you stayed in the military until retirement as one of the factors in your decision. 

One of the biggest financial benefits of a career in the military is the military retirement pension you receive when you retire after at least 20 years of active duty service.  Currently, there are two main retirement systems in place:  The High-3 (or High-36) system and the Blended Retirement System (BRS).  The High-3 system takes the average of your highest 3 years (36 months) of base pay and multiplies it by a factor of 2.5% per year of military service (i.e. 50% for 20 years or 60% for 24 years).  The BRS was rolled out in 2018.  It provides a lower pension percentage per year of service, 2.0% (i.e. 40% for 20 years or 50% for 25 years), but BRS includes Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) matching contributions of up to 5% of base pay. 

I put together estimated retirement pay charts for 2020 through 2039.  These are estimates for monthly retirement pension checks.  For previous years, I used the pay tables on the DFAS website, but future calculations for the retirement charts were conservatively made, using only a 1% base pay increase per year going forward, compared to an average of 2.55% base pay increase from 2017 to 2020.  The charts go from E-6 through E-9, W-1 through W-5, and O-3E through O-10, and calculations were done for the High 3 retirement system and the BRS.  They also assume a mid-year retirement of June 30th and retiring at full years of service, not fractional years.  Your own retirement numbers will be slightly different, but I’m hoping these conservative estimates for a retirement pension will help you successfully plan for life after the military.

Below is an example calculation for an E-7 retiring at 24 years of service

Years on Active DutyTime PeriodBase PayTime PeriodBase Pay
21July – Dec 2017$4566.60Jan – June 2018$4676.10
22July – Dec 2018$4848.30Jan – June 2019$4974.30
23July – Dec 2019$4974.30Jan – June 2020$5128.50
To estimate the military pension for the above example, I used each six month period for a total of the 36 months of base pay. Then you divide the total of the 36 months of base pay by 36 to get an average for base pay, which is $4861.40 in this example. Then you use your retirement multiplier (2.5% per year of service for High-3 and 2% per year of service for BRS) to determine your monthly pension. So for this example, retirement for the High-3 system would be $2917 per month and $2333 under the Blended Retirement System.

Click the links below to take you to full pages with estimates for military retirement:

High-3

BRS

Or you can click on the rank below to bring up a table for each specific rank:

High-3/High-36

BRS


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