About the Army Reserve
The Army Reserve is the largest of the UK's Reserve Forces. It is a vital component of the Army, providing essential mass, unique capabilities, and a diversity of skills critical to meeting the Army's commitments.
Army Reservists volunteer to serve alongside regular soldiers with an annual training obligation of either 19 or 27 days.
Join the Reserve nowWhat do the Army Reserves do?
Warfighting is the purpose of the Army's Reserve Forces; their role is to reinforce the Army. In peacetime this involves training for war, but it can also include contributing to operations at home and overseas. Throughout history almost every major operation has seen Reservists operate alongside their regular counterparts.
Army Reservists are drawn from all walks of life, compelled by a desire to serve; they are truly twice the citizen.
The Army Reserve Employers Guide 2023- Travel: Opportunity to train in places like Kenya or California
- Skills: Earn military and civilian qualifications
- Pay: Get paid for all of the training and Reserve duties you complete
- Benefits: Joiners financial incentives and the opportunity to earn a tax free bonus every year
- Fitness: Be trained by the best and become "Army Fit" in no time
Depending on the unit you join, your minimum training commitment could be 19 or 27 days a year.
As a Reservist you get paid for the time you spend training, and a bonus payment for completing a certain amount of training days each year. The pay scale that you’ll be on is based on what a regular soldier with the same job and rank would get. This increases as you get promoted and gain experience.
Depending on the unit you join, your minimum training commitment could be 19 or 27 days a year - rewarded with a tax-free lump sum called a bounty. This increases after each year of service. As well as the bounty, there are also subsidies that will pay for food while you're on duty and travel to the unit.
In addition, all volunteer Reservists, their partners and their children are now eligible for the HM Forces Railcard. This costs £15 and offers a 34% discount on rail travel throughout Great Britain for a whole year, helping to make off-duty travel more affordable.
To join the Army Reserve you need to be 18. You can apply to join when you are 17 years and nine months old, so that you're ready to join on your 18th birthday.
Maximum ages for joining as a Reservist:
To join as a soldier, the upper age limit for enlistment is the day before the candidate's 43rd birthday.
To join as an officer, you must apply by the time you are 48 years and nine months. You must start your training by your 50th birthday
Rejoiners can still join as a soldier until their 52nd birthday, and as an officer (if they have previously commissioned) until their 57th birthday.
The Army Reserve is organised into national units and regional units. Regional units recruit from their local area, and most people who join the Army Reserve will join one. But some will join a national unit.
What are national units?
There are 29 national reserve units, and they recruit from all over the UK. National units are more specialised than regional units, they recruit people with specialist skills but will, in some cases, train individuals from scratch. If you want to use the skills from your day job in the Army Reserve – whether you’re a police officer, doctor, engineer, chef, media relations expert or cyber security specialist – a national unit could be the place for you.