S-4375-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Ted Budd (R-NC)
What it does
This bill would require the military to pay the maximum allowable aviation incentive pay to any aviation officer with more than 8 years of aviation service, removing discretion to pay less. It would also expand an existing Air Force pilot retention demonstration program by shortening required service commitment agreements from four years to one year, removing certain assignment restrictions, increasing the maximum aviation bonus to $100,000 per year, and extending the demonstration program from 2028 to 2031. The bill would also require the Air Force to match or exceed retention contract terms offered by the Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve.
Who benefits
Active-duty military aviation officers with more than 8 years of service who would receive higher guaranteed pay. Air Force rated officers (pilots and other aircrew) who would gain more flexible duty assignments, shorter service commitment options, and larger bonuses. Military families who would benefit from reduced mandatory relocations. The Air Force and broader military as an institution, which would retain experienced aviators. Commercial airlines and defense contractors, indirectly, if the pipeline of experienced military pilots remains robust. National security broadly, if pilot retention improves readiness.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would bear the cost of higher mandatory pay and larger bonuses. The Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve, which may face increased competition for experienced pilots if active-duty retention improves — though the bill also requires active-duty terms to match Guard/Reserve offers. Defense budget planners who would have less flexibility in allocating aviation pay. Potentially other military occupational specialties that do not receive similar retention enhancements, creating pay equity concerns within the force.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. military faces a severe pilot shortage — the Air Force has reported a shortfall of roughly 1,800 pilots in recent years — and that commercial airlines offering significantly higher salaries are drawing experienced aviators away from active duty. They contend that mandatory maximum incentive pay and flexible assignment options directly address the two most commonly cited reasons pilots leave: compensation gaps and forced relocations. Shortening service commitment agreements from four years to one year, they argue, reduces the perceived risk of re-enlisting and makes retention offers more competitive with civilian alternatives.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating maximum pay regardless of individual circumstances removes the Secretary's ability to tailor incentives efficiently, potentially paying the maximum to officers who would have stayed for less and wasting limited defense dollars. They contend that the pilot shortage has structural causes — including training pipeline bottlenecks and operational tempo — that pay increases alone cannot fix, citing studies showing quality-of-life factors outweigh compensation in many separation decisions. Critics may also argue that extending the demonstration program to 2031 without requiring a rigorous independent evaluation locks in a costly approach before its effectiveness is proven.