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Defense Primer: Military Officers


Grade  and  Rank
The Armed  Forces are hierarchical organizations with
clearly defined levels of authority. The different levels for
officers are defined in law and called grades, while rank
refers to the order of precedence among those in different
grades and within the same grade (e.g., someone who has
been a Major for three years outranks someone who has
been a Major for two years; see 10 U.S.C. §741). However,
it is common for the term rank to be used as a synonym for
grade. Pay grade is an administrative classification that
determines certain rates of pay, but it is sometimes used to
indicate grade as well. For example, a Lieutenant
Commander   in the Navy may be referred to as an 0-4. See
Figure 1.
Numbers and Roles
Officers (including warrant officers) make up about 18% of
the Armed Forces, with enlisted personnel and military
service academy cadets and midshipmen making up the
other 82%. Officers outrank all enlisted personnel. Table 1
below lists the number of active-duty officers in each pay
grade.
Warrant  officers (pay grades W-1 to W-5) perform highly
technical or specialized work within their career field and


Updated December  10, 2024


also, in the case of the Army, serve as helicopter pilots.
Warrant officers constitute about 9% of the officer corps.
Company-grade   or junior-grade officers (pay grades 0-1
to 0-3) typically lead units with several dozen to several
hundred personnel, or serve as junior staff officers. They
make  up about 56% of the officer corps.
Field-grade or mid-grade officers (pay grades 0-4 to 0-6)
typically lead units with several hundred to several
thousand personnel, or serve as senior staff officers. They
make  up about 35%of the officer corps. The number of
officers in these grades is limited by law (10 U.S.C. §523).
General or flag officers (pay grades 0-7 to 0-10) may
lead units or organizations with several thousand to
hundreds of thousands of personnel or serve as staff for the
largest military organizations. General and flag officers
make  up just under 0.4% of the officer corps. The number
of officers in these grades is limited by law (10 U.S.C.
§§525-526).
Insignia
As shown  in Figure 1, each officer grade in the Armed
Forces has distinctive insignia, typically worn on the sleeve,
shoulder, collar, and/or headgear (caps, berets, etc.).


Table  I. Active-Duty Military Officers by Pay Grade (as of August 3 I, 2024)

                                                   Service
  Pay Grade        Army             Navy         Marine Corps       Air Force      Space Force        Total

    0-10                   13               8                3               13               3               40
    0-9                   53               37               25              43                5              163
    0-8                   110              68               29               86               9              302
    0-7                   124             107               39               99               II             380
    0-6                 3,614            2,959             702            3,183             232            10,690
    0-5                 8,607            6,417            1,951           9,171             746            26,892
    0-4                15,690           10,151           3,941           13,210            1,129          44,121
    0-3                26,350           19,522           5,881           20,934            1,262           73,949
    0-2                12,307            7,435           3,823            6,873             581            31,019
    0-1                 9,848            6,614           2,734            7,001             565            26,762
    W-5                  555               79              Ill      not reported              0              745
    W-4                 1,642             462              269      not reported              0             2,373
    W-3                 3,103             809              673      not reported              0             4,585
    W-2                 6,137             713              880      not reported              0             7,730
    W-I                 4,273              33              284      not reported              0             4,590
    Total              92,426           55,414          21,345           60,613            4,543         234,341
Source: Department of Defense, Defense Manpower Data Center, Active Duty Military Personnel by Service by Rank/Grade, August 2024. Note:
The Air Force first began accepting applications for Warrant Officers in April 2024.

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