How Is Army Severance Pay Calculated?
Use this premium calculator to estimate Army disability severance pay based on monthly basic pay, creditable service, disability rating, combat-related status, and optional tax withholding. The estimate follows the common disability severance formula used for service members separated for disability rather than retired.
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- Enter your service details and click Calculate.
- The chart will compare actual service, credited severance years, gross pay, and estimated net.
Expert Guide: How Army Severance Pay Is Calculated
If you are asking how Army severance pay is calculated, the first thing to understand is that people often use the phrase “Army severance pay” to describe several different payments. In practice, the most commonly discussed version is disability severance pay, which applies when a service member is found unfit for continued military service because of a disability, but does not qualify for military disability retirement. That distinction matters because the formula for disability severance is very different from retirement pay, voluntary separation incentives, transition benefits, or enlisted separation bonuses.
For most Army disability severance cases, the basic formula is straightforward: two months of basic pay for each year of service used for severance purposes. In simple terms, that can be expressed as:
Even though the formula looks simple, the actual amount can change depending on several legal and administrative rules. The Army, the Physical Evaluation Board process, the disability percentage assigned by the military, whether the condition is combat-related, and whether your service time is rounded up all play important roles. Taxes can also matter, and in some cases the payment can later interact with VA compensation. That is why an accurate estimate requires more than just plugging in years and pay.
What type of Army severance pay does this calculator estimate?
This page estimates Army disability severance pay. This is generally the payment made to service members who:
- Are found unfit for duty because of a service-connected condition,
- Have a military disability rating below 30%, and
- Do not have enough service to qualify for military disability retirement.
If a Soldier has a military disability rating of 30% or more and meets the applicable legal criteria, that Soldier may instead be placed on the Permanent Disability Retired List or Temporary Disability Retired List rather than receiving severance. Likewise, a Soldier with sufficient years for a regular retirement may not be handled under the severance framework at all.
The core formula in plain English
At the highest level, Army disability severance pay is based on three core inputs:
- Monthly basic pay at the time used for the calculation.
- Credited years of service for severance purposes.
- A multiplier of 2, because the law uses two months of basic pay for each credited year.
So if a Soldier has a monthly basic pay of $3,300 and 5 credited years of service, the estimated gross severance would be:
2 x $3,300 x 5 = $33,000
That is the gross figure before any estimated tax withholding. It is also before considering whether the service member is actually eligible for severance versus disability retirement.
How years of service are counted for severance
One of the biggest points of confusion is service time. The military does not always use a purely decimal calculation. For severance purposes, additional months are commonly handled by rounding rules. A common rule is that a fraction of a year of six months or more is counted as a full year. In practical terms:
- 4 years and 5 months is usually counted as 4 years for severance.
- 4 years and 6 months is usually counted as 5 years for severance.
- 4 years and 11 months is usually counted as 5 years for severance.
There are also minimum and maximum year rules that can substantially alter the final figure. In many disability severance cases, the years used in the formula are subject to a minimum of 3 years and a maximum of 19 years. For certain combat-related disabilities, the minimum years credited can be higher under applicable law and policy. Because these details can be technical, the calculator on this page displays both your actual entered time and the credited years used in the estimate.
Why the disability rating matters
Military disability rating is not used as a direct multiplier in the severance formula. Instead, it mainly affects eligibility. A Soldier with a rating below 30% is more likely to fall into the severance category if found unfit and otherwise not retirement-eligible. A Soldier with a rating of 30% or more may qualify for disability retirement instead of severance, which is a very different benefit with a very different long-term financial impact.
That means a 10% rating and a 20% rating can still produce the same severance estimate if monthly pay and credited years are identical. The rating determines whether severance is the likely path, but the gross severance amount itself is generally still driven by monthly basic pay and credited service years.
Monthly basic pay is the foundation of the calculation
Another common mistake is using total compensation rather than basic pay. Housing allowance, subsistence allowance, special duty pay, bonuses, and civilian earnings are generally not what drives the core disability severance formula. The main number you need is monthly basic pay from the official military pay table that applies to your rank and service longevity.
To illustrate how this changes the estimate, here are sample monthly basic pay figures from the 2024 military pay table for selected grades and service bands. These figures are included for educational comparison and should always be confirmed against the current official tables.
| Pay Grade / Longevity | 2024 Monthly Basic Pay | Sample Gross Severance at 4 Credited Years | Sample Gross Severance at 8 Credited Years |
|---|---|---|---|
| E-4 over 4 | $3,066.90 | $24,535.20 | $49,070.40 |
| E-6 over 10 | $4,413.90 | $35,311.20 | $70,622.40 |
| O-3 over 6 | $7,050.30 | $56,402.40 | $112,804.80 |
You can see from the table that pay grade and longevity have a major impact. Two Soldiers with the same number of severance years can receive dramatically different severance amounts if their monthly basic pay differs.
How combat-related status can change the estimate
Combat-related cases deserve special attention. Depending on the facts and the governing law applied to the case, a combat-related disability may change the minimum years used for disability severance pay. In addition, combat-related disability severance may receive different tax treatment. This is one reason many veterans are told to review their tax documentation carefully and verify whether their severance should have been taxed.
For planning purposes, the calculator on this page allows you to identify a disability as combat-related. When selected, the estimate uses a higher minimum credited years figure to reflect the more favorable floor often applied in combat-related severance computations. This does not replace legal review, but it does produce a more realistic estimate for many cases.
Taxes and net proceeds
Many people are surprised to learn that the amount deposited into the bank may be different from the gross severance amount. Federal tax withholding may be applied unless an exclusion or exception applies. Historically, tax issues around disability severance have been especially important for service members whose injuries were combat-related or who later qualified for relief under changes in tax law and IRS guidance.
That is why this calculator shows both:
- Gross severance pay, which is the formula amount before withholding, and
- Estimated net severance pay, which subtracts the tax rate you select.
This is only an estimate. Your actual withholding and tax treatment should be confirmed through official records, DFAS documents, and current IRS rules.
Sample scenarios
Below is a comparison showing how service length, monthly basic pay, and tax assumptions can affect the final estimate.
| Scenario | Monthly Basic Pay | Credited Years for Severance | Gross Severance | Estimated Net at 22% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Junior enlisted example | $3,066.90 | 5 | $30,669.00 | $23,921.82 |
| NCO example | $4,413.90 | 7 | $61,794.60 | $48,199.79 |
| Officer example | $7,050.30 | 8 | $112,804.80 | $87,987.74 |
Step-by-step process to estimate Army disability severance
- Find your monthly basic pay. Use your pay grade and years of service from the applicable official military pay table.
- Determine service time for severance. Include years and additional months, then apply the rounding rule if six or more months should count as a full year.
- Apply the minimum and maximum severance-year rules. In many cases, the result cannot be below 3 years or above 19 years, with special considerations for combat-related cases.
- Multiply by 2. The law generally uses two months of basic pay for each credited year.
- Estimate taxes. If you want a rough net figure, subtract an estimated withholding amount unless a tax exclusion appears to apply.
- Review eligibility. If your disability rating is 30% or higher, or you are retirement-eligible, you may be looking at disability retirement rather than severance.
Important differences between severance, retirement, and VA compensation
Army disability severance pay is a one-time lump-sum payment. Military disability retirement, by contrast, is an ongoing retired pay benefit. VA disability compensation is another separate system altogether. Because these programs interact in complicated ways, a Soldier should never assume that a severance estimate tells the full financial story.
For example, some veterans encounter recoupment issues, where disability severance affects future VA payments. Whether recoupment applies, and how much is recouped, can depend on the date of separation, whether the disability is combat-related, and the governing law. This is one reason official guidance and legal assistance can be extremely valuable before signing final paperwork or relying on an informal estimate.
Where to verify the official rules
To verify current law and official pay data, start with authoritative government and educational sources. Useful references include:
- DFAS military pay tables for current monthly basic pay figures.
- VA disability information for related benefit context and compensation issues.
- 10 U.S. Code Section 1212 at Cornell Law School for statutory language on disability severance pay.
Common mistakes people make
- Using total compensation instead of monthly basic pay.
- Failing to round service correctly when six or more months should count as a full year.
- Ignoring the minimum and maximum severance-year rules.
- Assuming a higher disability rating automatically means a higher severance amount.
- Overlooking tax treatment and potential future VA recoupment.
- Confusing disability severance with retirement, VSI, SSB, or transition benefits.
Bottom line
If you want the short answer to how Army severance pay is calculated, it is usually this: take monthly basic pay, multiply it by 2, and then multiply it by the credited years of service used for severance purposes. Then adjust for the minimum and maximum year rules, review whether the disability is combat-related, and estimate any tax withholding. Finally, confirm whether you are truly in the severance category or whether disability retirement rules may apply instead.
The calculator above helps you do exactly that. It gives you a fast, realistic estimate, but it should still be compared with your official Army findings, DFAS records, and the governing law for your case.