Title 10Armed ForcesRelease 119-73

§3101 Definitions

Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART V— - ACQUISITION › Subpart Subpart A— - General › Chapter CHAPTER 205— - DEFENSE ACQUISITION SYSTEM › § 3101

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Defines key terms used in the chapter. Best value means the best mix of price, quality, technical performance or overall solution, and delivery timing. Capability requirement means a capability that is essential to solve an operational problem. Cost-effective means getting better results for users for the same or less money than other options. Operational problem means a military department’s challenge in meeting a mission because of current plans, new threats, or future ideas; it can include gaps in abilities, capacity, resources, or in coordinating across forces or commands. Service chief means the top leader for each service: Chief of Staff of the Army; Chief of Naval Operations; Commandant of the Marine Corps; Chief of Staff of the Air Force; and Chief of Space Operations.

Full Legal Text

Title 10, §3101

Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

In this chapter:
(1)The term “best value” means, with respect to an acquisition, the optimal combination of cost, quality, technical capability or solution quality, and delivery schedule.
(2)The term “capability requirement” means a capability that is critical or essential to address an operational problem.
(3)The term “cost-effective” means, with respect to an acquisition, delivering superior end-user results at equal or lower cost compared to alternatives.
(4)The term “operational problem” means—
(A)a challenge of a military department in achieving an assigned military objective based on current doctrine, emerging threats, or future concepts; and
(B)may include limitations in capabilities, capacity, resources, or the ability to effectively and efficiently coordinate across the joint force, with another combatant command, or among military capabilities.
(5)The term “service chief” means—
(A)the Chief of Staff of the Army, with respect to matters concerning the Army;
(B)the Chief of Naval Operations, with respect to matters concerning the Navy;
(C)the Commandant of the Marine Corps, with respect to matters concerning the Marine Corps;
(D)the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, with respect to matters concerning the Air Force; and
(E)the Chief of Space Operations, with respect to matters concerning the Space Force.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Codification section 2545 of this title, which was transferred to this section by Pub. L. 116–283, § 1808(a)(2), was also transferred or copied in large part to section 3001 of this title by Pub. L. 116–283, § 1806(a)(2)–(4).

Amendments

2025—Pub. L. 119–60 amended text generally. Prior to amendment, text defined the term “acquisition”. 2021—Pub. L. 116–283, § 1808(b)(1), substituted “In this chapter, the term” for “In this chapter:”, par. (1) designation, and “The term” and struck out pars. (2) to (4) which defined “defense acquisition system”, “element of the defense acquisition system”, and “acquisition workforce”. Pub. L. 116–283, § 1808(a)(2), renumbered section 2545 of this title as this section. 2014—Par. (1). Pub. L. 113–291 substituted “section 131 of title 41” for “section 4(16) of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act (41 U.S.C. 403(16))”.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Effective Date

of 2021 AmendmentAmendment by Pub. L. 116–283 effective Jan. 1, 2022, with additional provisions for delayed implementation and applicability of existing law, see section 1801(d) of Pub. L. 116–283, set out as a note preceding section 3001 of this title.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

10 U.S.C. § 3101

Title 10Armed Forces

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73