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Warrant Officer Involuntary Separation
Pay
Many
military members who are involuntarily separated from the military
are entitled to involuntary separation pay (severance pay).
To be eligible, a
military member must have six or more years of active duty, and less
than 20 years.
There are two types
of pay: (1) Full Pay and (2) Half Pay. To qualify for full pay, the
member must be involuntarily separated, be fully qualified for retention
and the service must be characterized as "Honorable." Examples
would be separation due to reduction in force, or separation due to
exceeding the high year of tenure.
To qualify for half
pay, the member must be involuntarily separated, with service characterized
as Honorable or General (under honorable conditions), and the reason
for discharge must not be one of the following:
- The member is
separated from active duty at the member’s own request.
- The member is
separated from active duty during an initial term of enlistment or
an initial period of obligated service. The initial term of enlistment
or initial period of obligated service is the active service obligation
that the member incurred upon initial enlistment or upon enrollment
in a commissioning program. This limitation also applies to a member
who desires to reenlist or continue at the conclusion of the initial
term of enlistment or an initial period of obligation and is denied
by the Military Service concerned.
- The member is
released from active duty for training or from full-time National
Guard duty for training.
- The member is
immediately eligible at separation for retired or retainer pay based
upon his or her military service.
- The member is
a warrant officer whose appointment is terminated and who then elects
to enlist.
- The member is
separated as a result of the execution of a court-martial sentence.
- The member is
being dropped from the rolls of the Military Service concerned.
- The member is
being separated under other than honorable conditions.
- The member is
an enlisted member who is separated for unsatisfactory performance
or misconduct.
- The member is
an officer who is separated for substandard performance, or acts
of misconduct or moral or professional dereliction.
- A Regular officer
having twice failed for selection for the promotion to the next higher
grade is not entitled to separation pay if that officer, after such
second failure of selection for promotion, is selected for, and declines,
continuation on active duty for a period that is equal to or more
than the amount of service required to qualify the officer for retirement.
There are several
other conditions that must be met. For details, see Department
of Defense (DOD) Pay Regulation, Volume 7A (Active Duty & Reserve
Pay), Chapter
35 -- Separation Payments.
Compute full separation
pay at 10 percent of 12 times the amount of monthly basic
pay to which entitled at the time of separation from active duty,
times the active service time.
Compute half separation
pay at 50 percent of what the full separation pay would have been.
Involuntary separation
pay is based upon grade (rank) and years of active service:
| Involuntary Separation Pay for Warrant Officers
with Between 6 and 12 Years of Military Service |
| |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
| W-4
|
28,507.68 |
33,258.96 |
39,660.48 |
44,618.04 |
51,670.80 |
56,837.88 |
64,450.08 |
| W-3
|
25,023.60 |
29,194.20 |
34,862.40 |
39,220.20 |
46,047.60 |
50,652.36 |
58,181.76 |
| W-2
|
22,613.04 |
26,381.88 |
32,348.16 |
36,391.68 |
42,534.00 |
46,787.40 |
52,911.36 |
| W-1 |
21,530.88 |
25,119.36 |
29,998.08 |
33,747.84 |
38,926.80 |
42,819.48 |
48,625.92 |
| Involuntary
Separation Pay for Warrant Officers with More Than 13
Years of Military Service |
| |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
| W-4 |
69,820.92 |
78,145.20 |
83,727.00 |
94,602.24 |
100,514.88 |
110,237.76 |
| W-3 |
63,030.24 |
71,507.52 |
76,615.20 |
84,833.28 |
90,135.36 |
98,923.68 |
| W-2 |
57,320.64 |
63,861.84 |
68,423.40 |
74,655.36 |
79,321.32 |
85,568.40 |
| W-1 |
52,678.08 |
58,212.00 |
62,370.00 |
68,060.16 |
72,313.92 |
79,373.52 |
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