Army Deployment Pay Calculator – Estimate 2025

Army Deployment Pay Calculator

Your Deployment Pay Breakdown

Before Deployment

During Deployment

After Deployment

Total Deployment Earnings

Pay Component Before During After

How to Use This Calculator

Start by selecting your military rank from the dropdown menu. Your rank determines your base pay, which serves as the foundation for all other calculations. Next, choose how many years you’ve been serving. Military pay increases with experience, so this is an important factor.

Enter your ZIP code to help estimate your housing allowance, though you can manually adjust the BAH (Housing Allowance) field if you know your exact rate. The calculator pre-fills BAS (food allowance) at the current 2025 rate of $460.25 per month for enlisted members.

Check the boxes that apply to your situation. If you have a spouse or children, mark “Have Dependents” as this affects your housing allowance. Combat zone deployments trigger tax-free income, so check that box if applicable. Family Separation Allowance (FSA) kicks in when you’re away from dependents for more than 30 continuous days, providing an extra $250 monthly.

Additional pays like Hostile Fire Pay ($225/month) apply when you’re in areas where you’re subject to hostile fire or explosion of hostile mines. Hardship Duty Pay and Hazardous Duty Pay compensate for especially difficult or dangerous assignments.

What Makes Deployment Pay Different

Deployment pay differs significantly from your regular paycheck. While stationed at your home base, you receive basic pay, housing allowance, and food allowance. When you deploy to a combat zone, several changes occur that boost your take-home income.

The most substantial benefit comes from Combat Zone Tax Exclusion (CZTE). For enlisted members and warrant officers, all pay earned during any month you serve in a combat zone becomes completely tax-free. Officers have a cap of $9,584.67 per month on tax-free income. This means you’re not paying federal income tax on your earnings, which can save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars monthly.

You’ll also receive special pays that only apply during deployment. Hostile Fire Pay or Imminent Danger Pay adds $225 per month when you’re in a designated hostile area. If you have dependents back home, Family Separation Allowance adds another $250 monthly after the first 30 days of separation.

Your housing allowance continues even though you’re not living in that housing, and you still receive food allowance despite eating at military dining facilities. Some service members choose to increase their Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) contributions during deployment since their tax-free income means they can afford to save more without reducing take-home pay.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is all deployment pay tax-free?
Not automatically. Pay becomes tax-free only when you’re deployed to a designated combat zone. The IRS maintains a list of qualified combat zones. If you’re deployed to a non-combat location, your pay remains taxable. Even in combat zones, officers face a monthly cap on tax-exempt income, while enlisted and warrant officers can exclude all their military pay from federal taxes for any month they serve in the combat zone.
Do I still get BAH when deployed?
Yes, you continue receiving your housing allowance during deployment. Even though the military provides your housing in the deployment location, you still need to maintain housing expenses back home for your family or your return. If you’re single with no dependents, you’ll receive BAH at the “without dependents” rate for your permanent duty station location.
When does Family Separation Allowance start?
FSA begins after you’ve been separated from your dependents for more than 30 continuous days due to deployment or temporary duty. The allowance is $250 per month. Both members of a dual-military couple can receive FSA ($500 total) if they lived together with dependents before both deploying to different locations. The allowance stops when you’re reunited with your family or the qualifying duty ends.
What’s the difference between Hostile Fire Pay and Imminent Danger Pay?
These are actually the same amount ($225 per month) but apply to different situations. Hostile Fire Pay goes to service members who are subjected to hostile fire or explosion of hostile mines, even if just for one day during the month. Imminent Danger Pay applies when you’re on duty in an area designated as an imminent danger zone. You can’t receive both simultaneously – you get one or the other based on your location and circumstances.
Can I change my TSP contributions while deployed?
Absolutely, and many financial advisors recommend increasing TSP contributions during deployment. Since combat zone pay is tax-free, you can contribute more without reducing your net pay as much as you would during normal duty. You can contribute up to the annual IRS limit. Some service members max out their TSP during deployment to take advantage of tax-free contributions, though you should balance this with maintaining adequate cash flow.
How does deployment pay affect my taxes?
Combat zone pay exclusion means those earnings don’t count as taxable income on your federal return. You’ll still see those amounts on your W-2, but in a separate box indicating they’re excluded from federal wages. This can drop you into a lower tax bracket and reduce your overall tax liability. However, you still pay Social Security and Medicare taxes on this income. Some states also exclude combat pay from state income taxes, but rules vary by state.
What happens to my deployment pay if I return early?
If you return from deployment early, your special pays stop based on the actual dates. Combat zone tax exclusion applies only for the months you actually served in the combat zone. If you served any part of a month in a combat zone, the entire month’s pay is generally tax-exempt for enlisted members. Special pays like Hostile Fire Pay are prorated – you receive them for the months you were actually in the qualifying location. FSA continues until you’re reunited with your family.

Pay Components Explained

Base Pay

Your base pay is determined solely by your rank and years of service. Congress approves annual military pay raises, with 2025 seeing a 4.5% increase that took effect January 1st. This forms the foundation of your compensation and is fully taxable under normal circumstances, but becomes tax-free in combat zones.

Housing Allowance (BAH)

BAH rates vary dramatically based on your duty station’s ZIP code, your rank, and whether you have dependents. High cost-of-living areas like San Francisco or New York City have significantly higher BAH rates than rural locations. This allowance is already tax-free, whether you’re deployed or not. It’s designed to cover average housing costs in your area.

Subsistence Allowance (BAS)

BAS offsets the cost of meals. For 2025, enlisted members receive $460.25 monthly, while officers receive a different rate. This allowance is also tax-free regardless of deployment status. You receive BAS even during deployment, though you’ll have access to free dining facilities.

Combat Zone Tax Exclusion

This is one of the most valuable deployment benefits. Every dollar of pay earned while serving in a combat zone avoids federal income tax. For an E-5 with 6 years of service earning about $3,900 in base pay, this could save $400-500 monthly in taxes, depending on filing status and other income sources.

Special Pays During Deployment

Hostile Fire/Imminent Danger Pay ($225/month) compensates you for serving in dangerous areas. Hardship Duty Pay (varies, often $150/month) applies to locations with particularly difficult living conditions. Family Separation Allowance ($250/month) helps offset the extra expenses families face when separated. These pays are also tax-free when earned in combat zones.

Common Calculation Mistakes

Forgetting About State Taxes

While combat pay is federally tax-exempt, some states still tax military income. Fortunately, many states provide their own military income exclusions. California, for example, follows federal combat zone exclusion rules. Check your state’s specific rules, especially if you’re a legal resident of a state different from your duty station.

Miscounting Partial Months

Many service members incorrectly calculate deployment pay for partial months. For combat zone tax exclusion, if you serve even one day in a combat zone during a month, enlisted members can generally exclude their entire month’s pay. Don’t prorate the tax exclusion unless you’re an officer exceeding the monthly cap.

Overlooking FSA Qualification Period

Family Separation Allowance doesn’t start on day one of deployment. You must be separated for more than 30 continuous days. If you deploy on January 1st, your first FSA payment covers February. Some service members miscalculate by including FSA from their first month deployed.

Not Accounting for BAH With/Without Dependents

The BAH rate difference between having dependents and not having them can be substantial – sometimes $500+ per month in expensive areas. Make sure you’re using the correct rate. If you get married or have a child while deployed, update your status promptly to receive the higher rate.

Assuming All Deployments Equal Combat Pay

Not all deployments are to combat zones. Deployments to Kuwait, Qatar, or other locations may or may not qualify for combat zone tax exclusion depending on your specific duty location within the country. Only IRS-designated combat zones qualify for tax-free income. Verify your deployment location’s status.

Maximizing Your Deployment Income

Strategic TSP Contributions

Combat zone deployments offer a unique opportunity. Since your income is tax-free, increasing your TSP contributions costs you less in terms of take-home pay reduction. If you contribute $500 monthly to TSP while in a combat zone, that’s $500 directly from your tax-free income. Back home, that same $500 contribution might reduce your paycheck by $600-650 after accounting for taxes you would have paid on that income.

Savings Deposit Program

The Uniformed Services Savings Deposit Program (SDP) allows deployed service members to deposit up to $10,000 in a special account earning 10% annual interest. This incredible rate, guaranteed by the government, is only available while you’re deployed to a combat zone and for 90 days after you return. Maximum your SDP contributions early in deployment to maximize interest earnings.

Managing Your Debt

The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) caps interest rates at 6% on debts you incurred before military service. If you have credit cards, auto loans, or mortgages with rates above 6%, contact your creditors with your deployment orders to request the reduced rate. This can save significant money, especially on large balances.

Housing Decisions

If you’re single and don’t own property, consider whether you need to maintain expensive housing during deployment. Some service members move to less expensive housing or even store belongings and eliminate housing costs, pocketing the BAH. However, weigh this against the convenience of having a home to return to and the hassle of moving.

References

Defense Finance and Accounting Service. (2025). Military Pay Tables. Retrieved from https://www.dfas.mil/MilitaryMembers/payentitlements/Pay-Tables/
Internal Revenue Service. (2024). Publication 3, Armed Forces’ Tax Guide. U.S. Department of the Treasury.
Department of Defense. (2025). Military Compensation. Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness. Retrieved from https://militarypay.defense.gov/
U.S. Army. (2025). MyArmyBenefits: Combat Zone Tax Exclusion. Retrieved from https://myarmybenefits.us.army.mil/
Department of Defense. (2024). Family Separation Allowance Fact Sheet. Defense Finance and Accounting Service.
U.S. Government. (2003). Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.
Scroll to Top