As an infantryman, how long and often can I expect to be in the field? Is it dependent on the unit I'm with, or same across the board? https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>The wifey wants to know. You know how that is. Fri, 15 Jun 2018 16:52:22 -0400 As an infantryman, how long and often can I expect to be in the field? Is it dependent on the unit I'm with, or same across the board? https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>The wifey wants to know. You know how that is. PFC Private RallyPoint Member Fri, 15 Jun 2018 16:52:22 -0400 2018-06-15T16:52:22-04:00 Response by SPC Private RallyPoint Member made Jun 15 at 2018 5:04 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714809&urlhash=3714809 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Soooo it’s going to all be dependent on your unit. But quite frequently if your in the lower 48 like Bragg and Campbell. If your in cold weather like drum, wainwright, etc expect a lot of field time in the summer months and a few during the winter for cold weather field training. SPC Private RallyPoint Member Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:04:10 -0400 2018-06-15T17:04:10-04:00 Response by SGT Matthew Sesar made Jun 15 at 2018 5:21 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714853&urlhash=3714853 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>All depend on the unit and your leadership in that unit. You will have long periods of time where you are either in the field or packing to go into the field. Make the best of it. That’s where you will make friends for life. SGT Matthew Sesar Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:21:31 -0400 2018-06-15T17:21:31-04:00 Response by MAJ Ken Landgren made Jun 15 at 2018 5:29 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714882&urlhash=3714882 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Coming from a pog, I salute you on your endeavors. MAJ Ken Landgren Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:29:13 -0400 2018-06-15T17:29:13-04:00 Response by CW3 Kevin Storm made Jun 15 at 2018 5:31 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714891&urlhash=3714891 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Plan on being divorced in 24 months or less. Lol, seriously, depending on the unit, upcoming missions, deployment cycles, you could be out there a lot, or not. you won &#39;t know till you get there. CW3 Kevin Storm Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:31:59 -0400 2018-06-15T17:31:59-04:00 Response by Sgt Wayne Wood made Jun 15 at 2018 5:34 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714899&urlhash=3714899 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>A lot depends on the unit... a lot depends on where you are in the train-&gt;deploy-&gt;maintenance cycle... a lot depends on how ‘hot’ your unit is...<br /><br />And then, you can always volunteer or extend your tour/deployment <br /><br />};-) Sgt Wayne Wood Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:34:22 -0400 2018-06-15T17:34:22-04:00 Response by MSG Danny Mathers made Jun 15 at 2018 5:34 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714900&urlhash=3714900 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>SGT Sesar&#39;s said it best. What you need to do is train your wife. You must be thinking WTF, but what I advise will save your marriage and career. The first thing is how to budjet your pay. I taught my wife how to handle the bills and who the unit&#39;s wives coordinator was. The military wives will help your wife on issues as they occur. It will be hard making things work on a private&#39;s pay. I had a break in service and came back in as a PV2, BCT, AIT and unit assignment as a PFC. We cut out all vour vices and my wife learned to cook and buy things we needed cheap with the help of other military wives we lived near. Train her to be self sufficient if she is not already that way. Sometimes it is better to wait a while separated which is what I did until I had the pay grade to support my wife and child. Be all you can be and Soldier Hard! I hope you consider some of my advise. MSG Danny Mathers Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:34:39 -0400 2018-06-15T17:34:39-04:00 Response by SPC Cody Truitt made Jun 15 at 2018 5:45 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714935&urlhash=3714935 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Depends on unit if your light or heavy SPC Cody Truitt Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:45:50 -0400 2018-06-15T17:45:50-04:00 Response by SSG Eduardo Ybarra Jr. MS Psyc made Jun 15 at 2018 5:57 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714952&urlhash=3714952 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I&#39;ll share this with you: in one of my first units we had a CSM who would continuously look at the blotter report and when the members of the BN began to show up more often we would head to the field. Normally our field problems would last two to three weeks, on some occasions our field training lasted a couple months. Overall I would say that it is not uncommon to spend over 200 days a year in the field. Some units optempo are higher than others if you are in a rapid deployment unit you can expect a great amount of field time. Remember though, this is the lifestyle and demand of a Grunt train train train because when you go to the show you should be ready to dance. SSG Eduardo Ybarra Jr. MS Psyc Fri, 15 Jun 2018 17:57:23 -0400 2018-06-15T17:57:23-04:00 Response by CPT Private RallyPoint Member made Jun 15 at 2018 6:07 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714966&urlhash=3714966 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Different across areas of operation. In Germany you can expect long excersises away from your home base. Ranging from 15-45 days with a good chunk of that under field conditions. In the US, you will spend 7-14 days in the field, maybe more if you go to NTC or JROTC. Either way, as a grunt expect to embrace the suck! CPT Private RallyPoint Member Fri, 15 Jun 2018 18:07:26 -0400 2018-06-15T18:07:26-04:00 Response by SFC Private RallyPoint Member made Jun 15 at 2018 6:11 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714971&urlhash=3714971 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I understand you’re a young private new to the military and the married military life, but you did join the infantry. If you wanted to see your family, you should have picked 42A SFC Private RallyPoint Member Fri, 15 Jun 2018 18:11:22 -0400 2018-06-15T18:11:22-04:00 Response by CSM Patrick Durr made Jun 15 at 2018 6:17 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3714981&urlhash=3714981 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Ordinarily, field training runs in cycles. Post&#39;s with Divisions on them use all Brigades and Battalions and some separate companies for post detail. 3 months local training...ie, local ranges, qualifications, squad level type training, then you&#39;ll likely get a rotation somewhere...NTC or another maneuver center for live fire and Platoon and Company level certifications and qualifications. You should expect to be gone 4-6 weeks. In todays Army, all this is working up to a rotation is support of a global mission...Afghanistan. Somewhere in there, you&#39;ll have a phase dedicated to post detail. guard duty, post cleanup, etc. Every unit is slightly different. Just remember, every day in the field working on field craft and wartime mission, is a day worthy of your time as an Infantryman. Take advantage of it because the bullets start flying you&#39;ll wish you had a few more. CSM Patrick Durr Fri, 15 Jun 2018 18:17:57 -0400 2018-06-15T18:17:57-04:00 Response by LTC Jason Mackay made Jun 15 at 2018 7:05 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3715061&urlhash=3715061 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Depends on the unit, your units assigned mission, and your leadership. I was OPFOR at NTC and it was 2-3 weeks a month, 11 months a year. Then there was Germany with 45 day gunneries and other missions. At Ft Carson there were 30 day+ pinion canyon rotations once or twice a year depending on NTC prep. most units are usually out a week or two. LTC Jason Mackay Fri, 15 Jun 2018 19:05:30 -0400 2018-06-15T19:05:30-04:00 Response by CSM Darieus ZaGara made Jun 15 at 2018 11:58 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3715756&urlhash=3715756 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>You will train often, there is only so much maneuver space out there and all units have to train and qualify. You will do you fare share, but no more than the rest. Thank you for your Service. Divorce is not inevitable. CSM Darieus ZaGara Fri, 15 Jun 2018 23:58:46 -0400 2018-06-15T23:58:46-04:00 Response by SPC Erich Guenther made Jun 16 at 2018 1:48 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3715849&urlhash=3715849 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>When they say it &quot;depends on your unit&quot; Airborne Corps units deploy more often than other units as well as front line units like Korea do and say specialized mission Infantry units deploy a lot. In peacetime it was roughly 5-6 months in the field sometimes a little more, minimum about half a year. Sometimes they group it together and sometimes they spread it out over a Calendar. Yes it will be hard on the wife for you to be gone that much and she needs to be able to run things in your absence. Marital issues are a problem in the Infantry MOS because of seperation. Special Forces has it a lot harder though in the seperation and marital issues department. SPC Erich Guenther Sat, 16 Jun 2018 01:48:07 -0400 2018-06-16T01:48:07-04:00 Response by SSG William Bowen made Jun 16 at 2018 6:18 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3715994&urlhash=3715994 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>This is from a thread on Reddit. I did not write it, but it seems pretty on point: <br /><br />Infantry is awesome. At the end of the day, you work harder and are more disciplined, combat-competent, filthy, sweaty, exhausted, freezing, broiling, hungry than any other regular job in the military. You get to become proficient with a plethora of weapons, mind-boggling communication systems, tactical vehicles, and drilled-into-you tactics that you get to doing instinctively without even thinking about it.<br /><br />Infantry sucks ass. You are treated like shit by high-level leadership. You enlisted to kick doors and shoot people in the face, but there you are picking moss out of the cracks in the garrison sidewalk because General Fucknut is coming to give a 3 hour speech about whogivesafuck. You embark on an 18-mile roadmarch; 26 miles later, your feet are hamburger and your 16-pound machine gun feels like it weighs 56 pounds. You stand guard at a weapons range in the sub-freezing temps for hours on-end, hours after the range went &quot;cold&quot; (no more firing), on a secure garrison, because you &quot;train like you fight.&quot; You show up for formation in the freezing rain; one guy forgot his gloves; everybody has to take their gloves off. You get your long-awaited weekend snatched away for CQ (charge of quarters = barracks desk duty) or battalion/brigade staff duty or courtesy patrol (even though there are such things as MPs) or a work detail or because your leadership fucked up scheduling and the ONLY day open for the weapons range is on the weekend.<br /><br />You deploy and live in dust-caked tents while a hundred meters away, personnel clerks and finance desk-jockeys who will never leave the FOB are living in air-conditioned housing units. You go on patrol for 6, 8, 10, 12, 24, 48 or more hours at a time, come back to the FOB and get in line for a hot meal; too bad, says the dining hall guard: your uniform is too dirty to come inside. You are moved out to a combat outpost with no running water and no electricity (other than the radios at the command post) and live there for a few weeks at a time; when you&#39;re not on-mission, you&#39;re in a guard tower, or fixing vehicles, or burning shit in oil-drums, or digging ditches, or stringing razorwire, or filling sandbags, or rolling out on QRF (quick reaction force) to help a patrol who got hit, or you&#39;re cleaning your weapon. If you have time to eat, masturbate, sleep, and wipe your asscrack off with babywipes, you do it.<br /><br />You train for 14 weeks to earn those blue disks, crossed rifles and blue cord (if you&#39;re a Marine, you train for 26 weeks, and I don&#39;t know what infantry-specific accoutrements USMC infantrymen get, forgive my ignorance, fellow grunts) and train for months or even a year further at your line unit to deploy to combat. You learn how to use almost every gun we have, you learn how to drive (and maybe gun) Humvees, Bradleys, Strykers, MRAPs (unit-dependent) and practice shooting with night-vision and infrared lasers, or night-vision or thermal scopes. You and your buddies give each other IVs with night-vision in the back of a moving Bradley for combat-lifesaver training. You itch for the day you deploy, while the veterans around you roll their eyes, having already seen what you yearn for.<br /><br />You get there and the enemy hides in civilian clothes; he uses women and children for human shields and spotters for mortar attacks. He kidnaps people from opposite tribes/sects and rapes women and murders children and tortures people with power drills to their kneecaps and cheeks and he cuts the tongue out of a 13 year old boy because the kid chatted with you during a halt on-mission. He kills your friends with sniper rifles and IEDs and you rarely, if ever, even see him face-to-face. You probably won&#39;t get the opportunity to kill him; rarely will you get the opportunity to even shoot at him. When you finally get that chance, you won&#39;t feel a thing. You won&#39;t be happy that he&#39;s laying there in front of you, bleeding and moaning on the pavement. You&#39;ll see dead people... civilians killed by them, killed accidentally by us, indigenous security forces (cops, military, local hired militia), bad guys... you may see people die right in front of you, within mere meters. At the end of it, you&#39;ll be dull. Numb. Desensitized. You&#39;ll wish you fired your weapon more.<br /><br />You&#39;ll come home and be unable to relate to the friends and family who clapped you on the back and wished you well when you left those few short years ago. You&#39;ll know that you were the very top of the food chain; only special operations direct action teams trained more, did more, saw more, and were in more danger than you were. And your future college classmates will find out you were in the military and say things like, &quot;Oh, my cousin is in the Navy, I think he does something with computers. He went to Iraq; it must&#39;ve been SCARY.&quot; Or, &quot;My buddy Joe joined the Army. Did you know him?&quot; Or, &quot;Did you KILL ANYBODY?&quot; Or, &quot;I support you guys, but I oppose the war. You didn&#39;t really believe in what we&#39;re doing over there, RIGHT?&quot;<br /><br />The highs are higher; relationships are more passionate (and more quickly burned out), weekends and block-leave periods are cherished, and days you somehow don&#39;t get put on the tower guard roster are things to behold.<br /><br />The lows are lower; I think I already summed them up.<br /><br />Caveat: tankers, scouts, combat engineers, and arty guys (the other combat-arms MOS) are cool too. And medics/corpsmen, EOD, dog handlers, psyops, civil affairs, JTACs, and pilots. I don&#39;t mean to seem like I&#39;m marginalizing every other military MOS aside from Army/USMC infantry.<br /><br />The beer I&#39;m drinking right now is one of the best beers I&#39;ve ever had. Because it&#39;s Labatt-Infantry-Blue, bitches. SSG William Bowen Sat, 16 Jun 2018 06:18:06 -0400 2018-06-16T06:18:06-04:00 Response by SFC Johnathan Severs made Jun 16 at 2018 9:23 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3716329&urlhash=3716329 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Pack your A Bag and B Bag and plan to spend some quality time snuggled up on a rock because infantry training is most realistic in the field where stress can be enduced as a norm. Personally, I recall spending entire weeks in training and coming back for a Sunday reset just to do it all over again Monday morning after PT. If it isn’t the field, it’s the range or a gunnery or mob village somewhere and either way, it’s the job. <br /><br />If the wife is asking - hmmm - may want to inquire more on there. Young couple - sure, what to do with her time alone in a new area but I’m sure you’ve heard all the horror stories. But I’m sure you’re wise enough to know they’re ‘based on real events’. SFC Johnathan Severs Sat, 16 Jun 2018 09:23:15 -0400 2018-06-16T09:23:15-04:00 Response by SSG Jason Neumann made Jun 16 at 2018 9:35 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3716347&urlhash=3716347 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It all depends on the unit. You can expect FTX&#39;s at least once a month. Then you come back refit and clean equipment. Then the next month do it again. FTX&#39;s can last a few days to 3 weeks or more. If you are ramping up to head to a training center then expect long days and hard work. At least a month at those training centers. She will have to adapt to this and accept the fact you will be training. Most command teams will allow Soldiers to come home to refit during those long training periods. SSG Jason Neumann Sat, 16 Jun 2018 09:35:04 -0400 2018-06-16T09:35:04-04:00 Response by SPC Bradly Martin made Jun 16 at 2018 10:02 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3716390&urlhash=3716390 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Safe bet would be 220-280 in the field. Battle drill 1A for dayssssss. Especially since the only deployments now are Africa. Just train, train, EIB, train, Djibouti rotation, train, PCS, train, EIB, so on and so forth :) SPC Bradly Martin Sat, 16 Jun 2018 10:02:20 -0400 2018-06-16T10:02:20-04:00 Response by SGM Bill Frazer made Jun 16 at 2018 11:23 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3716594&urlhash=3716594 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It depends on the unit- in the 82nd we set a record 1 yr by being in the field (exercises, training, etc.) for 271 days. It boils down to how active the unit is- what deployment level it has. 82nd runs or did 3 cycles- Training, Support, DRF ( Division Ready Force) each cycle 9 wks long. Training 9 weeks in field as much as possible probably weekends in garrison to refit. Support- 9 wks doing Range Control, Drop zone ops, school spt, etc. DRF- on call 2-6 hrs, readiness exercises around the nation, close in training. SGM Bill Frazer Sat, 16 Jun 2018 11:23:35 -0400 2018-06-16T11:23:35-04:00 Response by SPC Casey Ashfield made Jun 16 at 2018 2:38 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3717059&urlhash=3717059 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I was part of some units where 30 days (not annual total) in the field was a short rotation. And a &quot;fun&quot; field problem we did with 10th Mtn had us in the field, hiking up a mountain chain over 21 days with &quot;light packs&quot; of 65-ish pounds. Compared to the heavy packs of 90+ Welcome to the infantry. <br /><br />On a personal note, divorce rates among combat MOS and veterans in general is incredibly high. That is something BOTH of you need to aware of. SPC Casey Ashfield Sat, 16 Jun 2018 14:38:25 -0400 2018-06-16T14:38:25-04:00 Response by SSG Brian L. made Jun 17 at 2018 7:53 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3718739&urlhash=3718739 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Three to eight months out of the year...not what you wanted to hear IM sure but count on this. SSG Brian L. Sun, 17 Jun 2018 07:53:12 -0400 2018-06-17T07:53:12-04:00 Response by SFC George Sease made Jun 17 at 2018 8:53 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3720509&urlhash=3720509 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>As infantry you should expect to have time in the field. If your unit is NOT in the field I would STRONGLY SUGGEST that you GET THE HELL AWAY/OUT of that unit just as fast as you can. The infantry is a unit that has to spend time in the field so that they can get AND keep their edge. If you have a skill and don’t use it then you will lose it. Same thing in the infantry. <br />Look at it this way, think of all the big lies that you can tell after you get out/retire. I remember one time marching 50 miles both ways up hill and through a swamp in a snow storm and it was 105 in the shade. SFC George Sease Sun, 17 Jun 2018 20:53:58 -0400 2018-06-17T20:53:58-04:00 Response by SPC Anthony Kueneman made Jun 20 at 2018 7:25 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3728544&urlhash=3728544 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>All depends on the unit. Don&#39;t worry though, the field is where you will have the best time. SPC Anthony Kueneman Wed, 20 Jun 2018 19:25:20 -0400 2018-06-20T19:25:20-04:00 Response by SFC Private RallyPoint Member made Jun 21 at 2018 1:26 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3730660&urlhash=3730660 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>There was a field problem that started in 1942 that went all the way to 1945. if you find yourself in the field for any duration shorter than this.....you&#39;re in good shape. SFC Private RallyPoint Member Thu, 21 Jun 2018 13:26:41 -0400 2018-06-21T13:26:41-04:00 Response by SGT Private RallyPoint Member made Jun 27 at 2018 8:58 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3748978&urlhash=3748978 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Unit dependent SGT Private RallyPoint Member Wed, 27 Jun 2018 20:58:42 -0400 2018-06-27T20:58:42-04:00 Response by SSG Harry Outcalt made Jul 10 at 2018 12:55 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3781769&urlhash=3781769 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Unit&#39;s mission dictates training , so it&#39;s never the same across the board . Some unit&#39;s have 9 month&#39;s out of the year in the field while others 3 month&#39;s , with the average being in the middle , type of unit also affects field time , Mech Infantry tends to do more field training they carry there own support with them , vs Airborne or Air Assault, Mountain troops also spend above average time in the field , but regardless the specifics of your Infantry and your not training in the rain and mud , your training like Cavalry , roflol SSG Harry Outcalt Tue, 10 Jul 2018 12:55:15 -0400 2018-07-10T12:55:15-04:00 Response by SGT Randall Spence made Aug 4 at 2018 7:24 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=3853421&urlhash=3853421 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It really depends on the unit and you(believe it or not!) You have unit deployments, and then you have a variety of schools that you can attend. One year I was home three months out of 12, and not all together either. SGT Randall Spence Sat, 04 Aug 2018 19:24:57 -0400 2018-08-04T19:24:57-04:00 Response by SFC David Reid, M.S, PHR, SHRM-CP, DTM made Aug 4 at 2019 8:19 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=4881681&urlhash=4881681 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>All of this will vary by unit, and assignments! SFC David Reid, M.S, PHR, SHRM-CP, DTM Sun, 04 Aug 2019 20:19:40 -0400 2019-08-04T20:19:40-04:00 Response by CPT Lawrence Cable made Oct 1 at 2019 9:30 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=5079315&urlhash=5079315 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Unit dependent, but even in the best, or worst, depending on your point of view, you will be spending considerable time in the field. We train to fight and there is seldom a battlefield in cantonment. Sit down and go over this with your wife and make sure she can handle the family bills and things while you are in the field. Often times the units enlisted wives have some kind of a club that offers both help and companionship when you are in the field or deployed. <br />I got married on a Saturday and left the next Friday for OCS, which was kind of the lifestyle for the next couple of years. Even as a National Guard Engineer, I average more than 70+ days a year away from home. <br />Oh, and I am still married to the same woman. CPT Lawrence Cable Tue, 01 Oct 2019 09:30:12 -0400 2019-10-01T09:30:12-04:00 Response by MSG Dan Castaneda made Aug 19 at 2020 8:26 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=6224421&urlhash=6224421 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Your going to find out really quick just how strong your marriage really is. When I first met my wife in 1999 she was only 19 and I was skeptical. I was a young E-5 and had no idea just how long I was going to stay in. We’ve been together over 20 years now and still going strong. She bought into the way of life as she really saw just how well the military would take care of not just me but her, and my children. <br />I will say that if she or you get to the point where you are unhappy, try changing units. I did, went SF and it was the best decision I ever made for both my family and I. I was gone a lot but when I was home, I was home. MSG Dan Castaneda Wed, 19 Aug 2020 20:26:25 -0400 2020-08-19T20:26:25-04:00 Response by SSG Watis Ekthuvapranee made Aug 20 at 2020 10:55 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=6226212&urlhash=6226212 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Depended on the unit. However, generally all unit has the same phases that they have to go through. There are weekly, monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, and yearly-- that&#39;s a preparation for deployment and deployment. With that there are team and squad integration training, squad qualification, platoon qualification and exercise, company maneuvering exercise, and Brigade exercise at National Training Center, Fort Irwin, CA or Joint Readiness Training Center, Ft. Polk, LA. Then, last but not least preparation for deployment and deployment and everything rinse and repeat as necessary (and it is necessary). So, all this expecting to be around 5-year cycle. However, single Soldier expecting to permanently change of duty station (PCS) to go to different Fort including overseeing station like Germany, Korea. I don&#39;t know if there are any tour of duty for Kuwait as an infantryman, at least not as E4 or below. Thou, I could be wrong about this. There are always some lucky few. So, that is how it has been. Thou, it has been awhile since I retired. But knowing the Army, it&#39;s always same different. It&#39;s like a football or any athletic unit there are individual training, section training, team rehearse, and it&#39;s show time; then do it all over again.<br /><br />Whooaaa! SSG Watis Ekthuvapranee Thu, 20 Aug 2020 10:55:01 -0400 2020-08-20T10:55:01-04:00 Response by CPT Private RallyPoint Member made Oct 9 at 2020 3:04 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=6385060&urlhash=6385060 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Plan on if you&#39;re Infantry, not giving two Foxtrots where you are, when you are, but just being.<br /><br />If you&#39;re active duty, be it. If you&#39;re Guard, be it. If you&#39;re Infantry, no matter if you&#39;re AD or Guard, roll with it.<br /><br />You asked.<br />The answer: If you&#39;re AD, it is what it is is. If you&#39;re Guard, pause/suspend &quot;normal life&quot; and operate within an AD context.<br /><br />Enjoy the fresh air &quot;in the field&quot;, enjoy the rain, snow, sunshine or sunburn, and do what you&#39;re supposed to. Else, change MOS because 11x is not for you. CPT Private RallyPoint Member Fri, 09 Oct 2020 03:04:47 -0400 2020-10-09T03:04:47-04:00 Response by 1SG Ernest Stull made Oct 9 at 2020 9:39 AM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=6385989&urlhash=6385989 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>As an Infantryman its your job to learn your craft and that is through being in the field. I was in the infantry for 23.5 years and I spent about 14 years deployed to where ever the army sent me. 1SG Ernest Stull Fri, 09 Oct 2020 09:39:57 -0400 2020-10-09T09:39:57-04:00 Response by SSG Cliff Richardson made Oct 9 at 2020 6:00 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=6387277&urlhash=6387277 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Most everybody hit it right, especially Sgt. Sesar - you should work on building relationships with your squad, pltoon, company, these things remember are built on trust! Unforntunately there tends to be a lot of sliders, sometimes real shit bags in infantry units, be careful.. I will say as far as time in the field, I had a CO in a Bradley unit I was 11M30 over from 11B in Friedberg Germany, the CO was a Cpt. and his brother was a mech cav CO same rank, brother was stationed not 30 km from Friedberg. The two found we found out later were in a competition as to who would make Major first, this friendly thing between two brothers caused us to have over 270+ days over all in the field, and they couldn&#39;t care less what it did to us or those that had family. Now understand that both brothers had some time in Ranger Bats, and both had a few, at least 6 yrs in SF, so either the competition would have brought all that time or just their way of seeing things as Infantry leaders. I&#39;ll say one thing more, in this modern Army, it would do you great justice to try and go to Airborne, ranger schools as a minimum and if possible SF, in these catagories you will not only make a smoother way for you as a grunt, but you will also make it easier for promotions. Don&#39;t forget college, if nothing else get a degree if you don&#39;t already have one - PLEASE!!! SSG Cliff Richardson Fri, 09 Oct 2020 18:00:07 -0400 2020-10-09T18:00:07-04:00 Response by SSG Roger Ayscue made Oct 9 at 2020 9:20 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/as-an-infantryman-how-long-and-often-can-i-expect-to-be-in-the-field-is-it-dependent-on-the-unit-i-m-with-or-same-across-the-board?n=6387790&urlhash=6387790 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It depends upon the unit, the readiness code of the unit and the place of the unit on the deployment schedule.<br />IF your unit goes out for evaluation, (They used to be called ARTEP: ARmy Training Evaluation Program, the they were EX Evals: EXternal Evaluations) and your unit fails or does poorly, or fails or does poorly at JRTC or NTC then the unit will be put in an &quot;Intensified Training Cycle&quot; to bring it up to standard. This may seem like a royal pain in the 4th point of contact, but you have to ask yourself one question...&quot;Would you want to go to COMBAT with your unit exactly as it is right now?&quot; If the answer is NO then you will WANT to go to the Field, because training makes you better. As General Patton said &quot;A pint of sweat will save a gallon of blood!&quot; SSG Roger Ayscue Fri, 09 Oct 2020 21:20:19 -0400 2020-10-09T21:20:19-04:00 2018-06-15T16:52:22-04:00