Posted on Feb 4, 2021
SSG Dennis Mendoza
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Can that service members literally retire after doing the air force for 5 active years then 12 reserve years and currently the last 3 year active Army. He keeps mentioning that he can drop his retirement packet at anytime if he wants. Is that true?
Posted in these groups: Human ResourcesMs945 ahrc HRC3d376a2f Branch Manager
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SFC Retention Operations Nco
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Lol no. Definitely not. That's an example of someone who is confused about Reserve vs Active retirement. He could transfer into the Reserves and get a 20 year letter and be referred to as a "Gray area retiree", but he can't draw that retirement till he's in his 60s
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LtCol William Bentley
LtCol William Bentley
>1 y
CSM Tim Bebus - A non-regular retirement begins retired pay at age 60, unless the member had qualifying active duty for early retired pay eligibility after 28 January 2008, in which case for every 90 cumulative days of qualifying active duty, the age at which non-regular retired pay begins is reduced by 90 days. Which could very well be 59.5 years old, if the member had between 180 and 269 days of qualifying active duty, which would give them 6 months but not yet 9 months of early retired pay eligibility, which does not come with early eligibility for TRICARE. That is still set at age 60 for non-regular retirees. Cheers,
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CSM Tim Bebus
CSM Tim Bebus
>1 y
LtCol William Bentley Sir I was trying to base my guess at pay based on how the time was layed out in the question. I do agree with everything you stated
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LtCol William Bentley
LtCol William Bentley
>1 y
CSM Tim Bebus - You were closer than Government work, for sure. Even 6 months off out of 60 years is only off by less than 1/10th of 1%! Outstanding! Cheers,
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SFC Mike Thompson
SFC Mike Thompson
>1 y
He needs 12 AD to complete his 20yr. For Guard 20yrs with min points of 50 for each of those years. Depending on Rank and points, say an E-7 you would little less than half of an AD Soldier.
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SGM Bill Frazer
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I've got beach front property for him in AZ! Reserve time when counted countless than Active time, Thats why most Reservist's can't retire with pension till age 60
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CPT Lawrence Cable
CPT Lawrence Cable
4 y
SSG Dennis Mendoza - That would be correct, if he has 12 "good" years as a reservist and 8 Active Duty, he is eligible for retirement under the "non regular" reserve retirement. He still wouldn't get paid until he was 60 (minus some relatively new reductions for deployment time). He could finish his enlistment, go IRR, retire and transfer to the Retired Reserve, where he would be a "Gray Area" Retiree until he met the age requirement. What he needs to do is make sure that he gets a 20 year letter from the Reserves to make that official.
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SSG Dennis Mendoza
SSG Dennis Mendoza
4 y
CPT Lawrence Cable yeah he keeps saying that he can retire right now if he wants to and he's on active duty right now station in Fort Sill.
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CPT Lawrence Cable
CPT Lawrence Cable
4 y
SSG Dennis Mendoza Don't know the Active Duty rules, but he certainly could drop a packet and go home in the Guard or Reserve. If your question is can retire and stay on active duty, that would be no.
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SSG Dennis Mendoza
SSG Dennis Mendoza
4 y
CPT Lawrence Cable well no can he dropp the retirement packet while currently on active duty, that's what he says that he can drop his packet but he's active duty right now. I know on the national guard and reserve side he can but on active duty seems weird to be able to do it if he only has enough time for reserve retirement
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CSM Darieus ZaGara
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He can drop it, but it will land nowhere.
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