Military Medical Retirement Pay Calculator
Accurate Estimate for DoD Chapter 61 Disability Retirement
$2,750.00
$2,750.00
$1,650.00
$4,125.00
Disability Percentage
Calculation Method Comparison
This chart compares the three possible payment limits. Your pay is the higher of Disability or Longevity, capped at 75%.
What is a Military Medical Retirement Pay Calculator?
A military medical retirement pay calculator is an essential tool for service members undergoing the Medical Evaluation Board (MEB) or Physical Evaluation Board (PEB) process. When a service member is found unfit for duty due to a service-connected disability, they may be eligible for Chapter 61 retirement if their disability rating is 30% or higher.
This military medical retirement pay calculator helps determine the monthly gross pension paid by the Department of Defense (DoD). It is important to distinguish this from VA Disability Compensation, which is separate and often offsets DoD pay. Many veterans mistakenly believe they receive both in full; however, unless you qualify for CRDP or CRSC, the DoD pay is typically reduced by the amount of VA pay received.
Military Medical Retirement Pay Calculator Formula
The DoD uses two specific formulas to calculate medical retirement. The retiree is entitled to whichever calculation results in a higher amount, though it can never exceed 75% of the base pay.
1. The Disability Percentage Method
This is the most common method for those with fewer years of service. It multiplies your retired pay base (usually High-3) by your DoD disability rating percentage.
Formula: Retired Pay Base × Disability Rating % = Monthly Pay
2. The Longevity Method
This method favors those who have served closer to 20 years. It uses your years of service and a multiplier based on your retirement plan.
Formula: Retired Pay Base × Years of Service × Multiplier = Monthly Pay
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| High-3 Pay | Average basic pay for 36 highest months | USD ($) | $3,000 – $15,000 |
| DoD Rating | Disability rating given by PEB | Percentage (%) | 30% – 100% |
| Years of Service | Total active duty time | Years | 1 – 40 Years |
| Multiplier | Factor based on retirement system | Decimal | 0.02 or 0.025 |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: Junior NCO with High Rating
An E-5 with 6 years of service is medically retired with a 60% DoD rating. Their High-3 average is $3,800.
- Disability Method: $3,800 × 60% = $2,280
- Longevity Method (Legacy): $3,800 × 6 × 2.5% = $570
- Result: The military medical retirement pay calculator selects the higher value: $2,280.
Example 2: Senior Officer Near Retirement
An O-5 with 18 years of service is medically retired with a 40% DoD rating. High-3 average is $9,500.
- Disability Method: $9,500 × 40% = $3,800
- Longevity Method (Legacy): $9,500 × 18 × 2.5% = $4,275
- Result: The military medical retirement pay calculator selects $4,275 because the longevity method is more beneficial.
How to Use This Military Medical Retirement Pay Calculator
- Enter High-3 Pay: Locate your average basic pay over the highest 36 months of your career.
- Input Years: Enter your total active duty years, including decimals for partial years.
- Select Rating: Choose the percentage provided by your PEB findings (must be 30%+ for retirement).
- Choose Plan: Select “Legacy” if you are under the old 2.5% system or “BRS” if you are under the 2.0% system.
- Analyze Results: View the primary result and compare how the different methods stack up.
Key Factors That Affect Military Medical Retirement Pay Results
- DoD vs VA Rating: This calculator uses the DoD rating. Your VA rating may be different and impacts your net take-home pay via the offset.
- The 75% Rule: By law, medical retirement pay cannot exceed 75% of your basic pay, regardless of your rating or years of service.
- BRS vs Legacy: The Blended Retirement System uses a lower 2.0% multiplier for the longevity calculation, making the disability method more likely to be the “winner.”
- VA Offset: Unless you have 20 years of service (qualifying for CRDP) or combat-related injuries (qualifying for CRSC), your DoD pay is reduced dollar-for-dollar by VA compensation.
- Taxation: Disability pay based on the “disability method” may be tax-free if the injuries are combat-related or if you were in the military on/before Sept 24, 1975.
- Inflation (COLA): Your retirement pay is subject to annual Cost of Living Adjustments, helping maintain purchasing power over time.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Yes. If you receive a rating of 0%, 10%, or 20%, you generally receive a one-time disability severance payment rather than a lifetime monthly retirement pension.
Yes. Temporary Disability Retired List (TDRL) pay is calculated the same way, but the minimum payment is 50% of your base pay while on the temporary list.
The “VA waiver” requires that for every dollar you receive in VA disability compensation, one dollar is deducted from your DoD retirement pay. This is done because VA pay is tax-free.
No, Combat Related Special Compensation (CRSC) is a separate calculation for those with combat-coded disabilities that restores some or all of the VA offset.
It depends. If your disability is combat-related or you entered service before 1975, the portion calculated by the disability method may be tax-exempt.
The DoD is required to pay you the most beneficial amount. If your longevity calculation (Years × Multiplier) is higher than your disability rating calculation, you get the longevity amount.
Only if you are on the TDRL. Once you are placed on the Permanent Disability Retired List (PDRL), your DoD rating is fixed.
Yes, you can toggle between the 2.0% BRS multiplier and the 2.5% Legacy multiplier.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
- 🔗 VA Disability Rates – View the current compensation tables for VA ratings.
- 🔗 CRSC vs CRDP Comparison – Understand how to recover pay lost to the VA offset.
- 🔗 Military Retirement Calculator – Calculate standard 20-year retirement benefits.
- 🔗 High-3 Pay Chart – Historical basic pay tables to help determine your retired pay base.
- 🔗 MEB/PEB Process Guide – A step-by-step walkthrough of the medical board journey.
- 🔗 TDRL vs PDRL Explained – Learn the differences between temporary and permanent retirement.