Understand and prepare for the changes that occur in pay and allowances due to deployment and post-deployment. After entering some personal data such as rank, time in service, duty station, special pays and Family information, Soldiers and Family members can view their estimated monthly income both before and after deployment.
Related Fact Sheets
- Deployment and Mobilization Support
- Defense Commissary Agency (DeCA)
- Space-Available Travel (Space-A Travel)
- The Exchange (Army & Air Force Exchange Service)
- Air Force Wounded Warrior Program (AFW2)
- Airman and Family Readiness Center (A&FRC)
- Combat Zone Tax Exclusion (CZTE)
- Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve (ESGR)
- Hostile Fire Pay (HFP)
- Legal Assistance Services
- Military OneSource
- Relocation Assistance
- Reserve Educational Assistance Program (REAP)
- Servicemembersā€™ Civil Relief Act (SCRA)
- Special Compensation for Assistance with Activities of Daily Living (SCAADL)
- Uniform Services Savings Deposit Program (USSDP)
- Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA)
- Yellow Ribbon Reintegration Program
Featured: Reunion
The return home from combat can often leave servicemembers feeling out of place with the most important people in their lives - their families.
"In deployment, Soldiers grow accustomed to a new lifestyle and a new 'family' - those buddies that bond together to defend each other," said Maj. Ken Williams, 14th Military Police Brigade chaplain. "This lifestyle change is prolonged and becomes familiar, i.e., the new normal."
The families also change while the Servicemember is deployed.
"The family is a system," Williams said. "When one family member is absent, the whole system changes. All members of the family adapt to a new 'normal' way of life."
When the servicemember returns, the family may feel uncomfortable with each other, and the servicemember may withdraw from the family.