How long can you be a SPC in the Army?

The RCP for corporals and specialists will go from 10 years to eight years of service. Promotable Soldiers in the grade of E-4 will be allowed to stay up to 12 years. For the past three years, they have been allowed up to 15 years of service.
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How long do you have to be a SPC to get SGT?

The time-in-grade requirement for attaining eligibility for promotion to SGT is eight months as a corporal or specialist (CPL/SPC), waiverable to four months for those recommended in the secondary zone.
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How long does it take to go from specialist to sergeant?

Specialist (E-4)

They can be promoted to sergeant after 11 months TIG and 47 months TIS. They hold the same pay grade as a corporal but have fewer personnel leadership responsibilities.
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How long are you a specialist in the Army?

Advancement to Specialist (SPC)

24 months Time in Service (TIS); up to 18 months can be waived. 6 months Time in Grade (TIG); up to 3 months can be waived.
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What comes after SPC in the Army?

There are 13 enlisted Army ranks: private, private second class, private first class, specialist, corporal, sergeant, staff sergeant, sergeant first class, master sergeant, first sergeant, sergeant major, command sergeant major and sergeant major of the Army.
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E-4 Mafia: Origin of the Specialist (US Army)



Why did the Army get rid of specialist ranks?

Elder goes on to explain, "In 1968 when the Army added the rank of command sergeant major, the specialist ranks at E-8 and E-9 were abolished", because they were notional rather than actual.
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How much do SPC make in the Army?

Army Specialist Pay

A Specialist is a enlisted soldier in the United States Army at DoD paygrade E-4. A Specialist receives a monthly basic pay salary starting at $2,393 per month, with raises up to $2,906 per month once they have served for over 6 years.
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How do you get promoted to SPC?

SPC Promotion Requirements: Automatic promotion with 24 months TIS and 6 months TIG. With waiver, 18 Months TIS and 3 months TIG. CPL Promotion Requirements: For advancement to Corporal most units require the soldier to hold a leadership position, such as a team leader.
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Is specialist a good rank?

After 1985, only one specialist rank remained. It was paid at the E-4 level, same as a corporal. Today, specialist is the most common rank in the Army. But some specialists are so high-speed, so good at their jobs, so inspiring to their fellow troops, that the Army decides it must have them as leaders now.
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How do you address the military in SPC?

While it is always correct to write out the rank fully … Specialist Brett Wilson … in the Army they use an Army-specific abbreviation for the Specialist – SPC. This Army-specific abbreviation for his rank is ALL CAPS & no periods: SPC. Below I've shown it both ways.
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When can a SPC go to the board?

AR 600-8-19 paragraph: 2-3 c(3) The promotion to SPC requirements are 24 months TIS and 6 months TIMIG. You must also be recommended by your chain of command. If you are fully eligible and not recommended from promotion to E-5 then you must be counseled as to why you are not going to the board. See AR 600-8-19.
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Can you make staff sergeant in 4 years?

In order to be eligible to be considered for promotion by the board, Marines must meet the following Time-in-Service (TIS) and Time-in-Grade (TIG) requirements: Staff Sergeant (E-6) - 4 years TIS and 24 months TIG. Gunnery Sergeant (E-7) - 6 years TIS and 3 years TIG.
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How many times can you go to the promotion board?

Answer: There is no limit. The CCDR may recommend Soldiers every month to appear before a promotion board. It's important to understand that the PZ is limited to a one-year period. The Army expects, by the end of the one year period, Soldiers to be integrated onto the PRL/PPRL.
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Is specialist an automatic promotion?

If you enlist in the Army at the E-1 pay grade as a private or PV1, the first few promotions occur automatically. Automatic promotions stop at the E-4 pay grade or specialist or SPC rank.
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When can an E-4 go to the promotion board?

If you are an exceptional soldier, who has been nominated by your commanding officer, or if there is an exceptional need for officers at the next pay grade, you may be eligible to appear the promotion board, if you have completed 16 months of service, of which four months or more were at the E-4 pay grade.
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What rank do most enlisted retire at?

It is reasonable to assume that the average enlisted member will be able to retire at 20 years having achieved the rank of E-7, and the average officer should be able to retire at 20 years at the rank of O-5.
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How much does a SPC make a year?

US Army Salary FAQs

The average salary for a Spc is $54,019 per year in United States, which is 6% higher than the average US Army salary of $50,515 per year for this job.
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Can a corporal drop a specialist?

In short, the difference between the two E-4 grades is that one is considered a non-commissioned officer while the other is not. The corporal will go to the NCO training school while the specialist might not. In practice, the corporal outranks a specialist and will be treated as an NCO by the soldiers below him or her.
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Is the Army getting rid of specialist rank?

Beginning July 1, all Soldiers with the rank of specialist who have been recommended for advancement by a promotion board and completed the Basic Leader Course, or BLC, will be laterally promoted to corporal, a junior NCO.
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Can specialists become sergeants?

Both ranks can hold junior leadership positions, typically as a team leader responsible for three to six soldiers. Previously, specialists were promoted straight to sergeant in most cases, skipping the corporal rank. "This is a change in culture," Sgt. Maj.
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Can you skip ranks in the Army?

United States. A battlefield promotion is awarded to enlisted soldiers who are promoted to a higher enlisted rank during combat or combat conditions. The US Army discontinued this practice after the Vietnam War with the centralized promotion system, but in 2009 decided to again allow such promotions.
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How long does it take to make specialist?

Soldiers holding the rank of Private First Class are promoted to specialist after a minimum of two years of service in the Army.
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Can the military kick you out for having too much money?

There's nothing in an enlistment contract that says you have to leave the military if you come into a large sum of money, but there is a clause that allows for service members to request a discharge under "unique circumstances."
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Can a girlfriend live on Army base?

For starters, an unmarried couple cannot live on a base outside of certain extenuating circumstances that would have the non-service member defined as a caregiver for the service member's children. As a result, unmarried military couples typically live off-base.
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