Also no educational debt. |
If you were in a combat arm, it is very easy to get disability. Getting out without back, neck, or knee issues is rare |
Not everyone got a gi bill. My spouse did not. He had a fist share for him only. The pay was terrible. I spend more on medical with tricare as doctors suck and no one wants to take tricare. |
That has nothing to do with the thread. |
Cost share. Retirement is under $1k. After the annuity and medical and taxes it’s a few hundred. |
It actually is very easy to get a federal job if you're a veteran, just ask anyone who works in fed HR. And you don't need a clearance either, as the clearance/background investigation is part of the hiring process. The scam is that you get the job with the TS clearance first, and then you claim disability benefits through the military. And no, you don't have to be engaged in combat operations. I've seen this play out over a dozen times with co-workers, so yes, it happens alot. |
| If the husband and wife are both serving they each get a tax free housing allowance, or at least it used to be that way. Military is the only job someone can have for three years in their early 20’s that’ll pay them $2000+ a month in “disability” payments for the rest of their lives and still allow them to work extremely physical, difficult jobs despite their disability. Quotes due to knowing many people taking advantage of this- a toothache? Disability. Headaches sometimes? Disability. Lots and lots and lots of perks these days being in the military. |
They pay for the Raptor with disability payments. Do you now understand meathead? |
| They often have no housing costs, so can blow $1k a month on a ridiculous car. |
No, its not. |
What perks? |
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Op checking back in. FWIW the three families I am referring to have 2, 3 and 3 kids respectively, and the parents are around 40yrs old. So I assume they are higher ranking officers with years of military experience. One sometimes comes to school in what appears to be a flight suit type uniform.
One has a spouse that is a teacher, another has a HR type role for a Fed agency, the third I have no idea. I genuinely have no clue what officers make, I clearly don't know their family or personal financial situation. And those details are none of my business. It just surprised me to see the only military parents in my kids classes all driving such expensive vehicles. I didn't know if they got free or subsidized housing, which would be huge. Or that maybe officer can make more than I would have guessed. The only ~$40yo parents (not young people or singles) we know with multiple kids that drive $100K cars are lawyers or doctors So our perspective is clearly bias.
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Guarantee there is some family money involved. Lots of officers + their kids wives come from UMC families.
Also, lots of officer spouses are lawyers, work in finance, etc. So could easily have $500-600K HHI |
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The pay is more than you think and the benefits off-set expenses
Our family take home pay after taxes and TSP is $20K/month. One military and one civilian with similar take home pay. We have lower expenses with miitary benefits - subsidized day care (only $500/kid when we used it) - student loan forgiveness ($100K of student loans forgiven) - Defined benefit retirement with no employee contribution (will be about $90K/year) -GI Bill transfer to dependants for college expenses and instate tuition We drive nicer cars, but so not pay private school tuition - opted for the expensive house in a good school cluster |
| Military discounts for trucks and SUVs can be pretty huge. |