Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART II— - PERSONNEL › Chapter CHAPTER 59— - SEPARATION › § 1175a
Allows the military to offer money and benefits to members who choose to leave active duty early. To get the pay, a person must have more than 6 but not more than 20 years of active service, have at least 5 years of continuous active service right before leaving, not already have a different voluntary separation incentive, meet any other rules the service sets (like job, rank, or remaining service), and ask to separate. People with certain disability separations, those being considered for disability retirement, anyone who already got voluntary separation pay, or anyone under pending disciplinary or administrative separation are not eligible. Each year the service decides how many people may take the offer, and some of those who leave must serve at least 3 years in the Ready Reserve as a condition of getting the pay. Approved members get a separation payment set by the service, but no one can get more than four times the amount that would be paid for an involuntary separation for the same grade and years. Pay can be a single lump sum. If the member has at least 15 but less than 20 years, the payment may instead be split into installments over up to 10 years or a mix of lump sum and installments. People who do not qualify for retired pay get certain benefits and services for 180 days after separation. If a member later gets retired or retainer pay, or disability compensation, the service will take back the voluntary pay from those future payments in monthly steps until the total equals what was paid (disability deductions are reduced by federal income tax withheld). Some disabled retirees are protected from these deductions, and the pay does not have to be repaid if the person was already eligible to retire when accepted for the program. The Secretary can waive repayment for fairness or the public interest. If someone returns to active duty after getting the pay, the service can recover the amount from their basic pay unless the return was an involuntary recall or falls under other limited exceptions. The authority to separate members under this program ends on December 31, 2030, but anyone who separates by that date can still receive all pay and benefits they were promised.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 1175a
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73