Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART II— - PERSONNEL › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - OFFICER STRENGTH AND DISTRIBUTION IN GRADE › § 526
Sets the maximum number of top officers who can be on active duty for each service. The caps are: Army 219, Navy 150, Air Force 168, Marine Corps 64, Space Force 24. The Secretary of Defense can mark up to 232 jobs as joint duty so those officers do not count against the caps. For those joint jobs, the minimum numbers by service are: Army 75, Navy 53, Air Force 68, Marine Corps 17, Space Force 6, unless the Secretary decides a lower number is better. The Secretary may also set up to 35 positions in the Secretary of Defense Adaptive Force Account that do not count, and the Marine Corps Medical Officer is exempt. Several temporary situations do not count against the caps. Officers on training or on orders less than 180 days are excluded. Reserve officers authorized to serve 180–365 days can be excluded, but each service is limited to at most 10% of its authorized generals or admirals (round fractions down to the next whole number greater than zero); the Air Force may let up to two Space Force generals serve 180–365 days. Reserve or Space Force officers serving longer than 365 days but no more than three years may be excluded, but no more than five per service who are not in joint duty unless the Secretary of Defense allows more. Officers on leave before retirement or separation, officers between certain assignments, and Space Force officers in transition have 60-day exclusion windows. Temporary joint duty exclusions last up to one year. Officers leaving a joint duty job are excluded for 60 days; the Secretary of Defense can allow one extra 120-day extension, but no more than three officers per service may have that extension at the same time. If a service wants to add officers above the “baseline,” the action cannot take effect until 60 calendar days after the service secretary notifies the Armed Services Committees with the reasons. “Baseline” means the lower of the statutory cap or the number that counted toward the cap on January 1, 2023. The same 60-day notice rule and baseline apply to increases in joint-duty positions. By March 1 each year, the Secretary of Defense must report to the Armed Services Committees the numbers as of January 1 for service limits and joint-duty counts. The Secretary of Defense can increase the number of brigadier generals/major generals (and Navy equivalents) only if each increase is offset by reducing one appointment of the same grade in another service; total such increases combined with one other authority cannot exceed 15 at once, and the Secretary must give 30 days’ written notice to the Armed Services Committees naming the increases and the offsets.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 526
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73