Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle E— - Reserve Components › Part PART II— - PERSONNEL GENERALLY › Chapter CHAPTER 1205— - APPOINTMENT OF RESERVE OFFICERS › § 12207
People getting their first appointment as a reserve commissioned officer (not a warrant officer) in the Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine Corps must be given credit for earlier commissioned service in any armed force, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or the Public Health Service. The Secretary of Defense will write rules that apply to all four services and may limit or deny that credit if the person already gets extra credit for special training or education. Extra "constructive" credit can be given for advanced education, special training, or professional experience that the service will use. One year of credit is allowed for each year of education beyond a bachelor’s degree when that education is required for the officer job, with a cap based on normal degree lengths in that field. Health professions and related experience can get credit if directly used by the service; up to one extra year may be allowed for required internships and up to one year for each additional year of graduate training toward needed certification. The services can also give extra credit for special skills tied to operational needs, and may do so for certain advanced education during fiscal years 2021 through 2025. If a reserve component is critically short of certain health professionals below major or lieutenant commander, the Secretary of Defense may let the service give enough credit so the new officer starts as a captain (or a Navy lieutenant). A similar rule can raise new judge advocates to captain (or Navy lieutenant) but with a date of rank junior to others. Constructive credit cannot push someone above the grade needed to be appointed a colonel (or a Navy captain), is added to any prior service credit, normally is not given for education earned while serving as a commissioned officer on active duty (with a narrow exception for degrees finished faster than usual), and may be used only to set initial grade, rank in grade, and time in grade for promotions under rules set by the Secretary of Defense.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 12207
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73