Junior Airmen and Guardians are poised for a massive pay increase, Congress wants a study on letting troops grow beards, but lawmakers are saying no to retiring any F-15E or F-22 fighters.
Those are among the decisions unveiled Dec. 7 when Senate and House lawmakers released their compromise 2025 National Defense Authorization bill, an 1,800-page legislative behemoth setting policy for the Pentagon.
The House passed its version of the NDAA and the Senate Armed Services Committee cleared its markup in June, each with unique provisions and implications for the Air Force and Space Force. But while those bills faced a long road to becoming law, the new compromise NDAA is almost certain to be approved in the coming weeks with few or no modifications.
Here are some of the biggest likely impacts on the Department of the Air Force.
Pay Day and Personnel Matters
The most notable effect of the 2025 NDAA for most Airmen and Guardians will be on their paychecks. The measure authorizes a 4.5 percent across-the-board pay raise for all service members starting Jan. 1—plus an extra 10 percent on top of that for junior enlisted paygrades up to E-4, starting April 1.
Overall, it’s the third straight annual raise over 4 percent and the first raise targeted to specific grades in decades. As big as that 14.5 percent increase is, however, it’s less than what House lawmakers wanted. Reps. Chrissy Houlahan (D-Penn.) and Don Bacon (R-Neb.)—both Air Force veterans—chaired the House Armed Services quality of life panel and recommended a 19.5 percent raise. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that would cost more than $24 billion over the next five years; the lesser raise would still cost in the realm of $18 billion over five years.
The White House opposed the targeted increase, arguing major changes should be made in light of recommendations from the Pentagon’s Quadrennial Review on Military Compensation. But broad bipartisan support for the proposal overcame that objection.
Funding for the raise, which will cost $1.6 billion in fiscal 2025, is still subject to approval in the defense appropriations bill, which has not yet been completed.
A House proposal directing the Secretary of the Air Force to create a three-year pilot program allowing Airmen and Guardians to grow beards failed to survive in the final bill. However, the compromise measure directs the Secretary to brief lawmakers on “the feasibility and advisability” of establishing such a pilot program. By April 1, the report wants the secretary to answer whether:
- Beards would affect airtight seals on gas masks and other equipment
- Allowing beards would affect discipline, morale, or unity
- Beards could promote more inclusivity for those who suffer from razor burn or want to grow facial hair for religious reasons
- there are solutions to mitigate bias or negative perceptions about Airmen and Guardians who chose to grow beards, if authorized
Less than a year after the Air Force announced it was bringing back warrant officers, Congress took a step to allow the service to open the door for civilians to go directly to Warrant Officer Training School. The bill eliminates of a requirement that warrant officer candidates must serve at least one year of Active-Duty service.
Aircraft Numbers
Overall spending authorized in the measure rises just 1 percent, consistent with caps set by the Fiscal Responsibility Act, negotiated by the White House and Republicans in the summer of 2023.
But lawmakers differ from the President in details. The measure, if approved, would authorize six more F-15EX fighter jets than the 18 proposed by the president’s budget. The Senate Armed Services Committee had supported that increase in response to those extra planes showing up on the National Guard’s unfunded priorities list.
Other aircraft added in the measure include two C-130J cargo planes, one LC-130 “ski plane” for transporting cargo to remote, snowy locations, and two additional C-40s used primarily for transporting VIPs and leaders. These 11 aircraft add $1.2 billion in expense, which lawmakers would fund in part by cutting $500 million in F-35 fighter and KC-46 funding. They justified the cuts by citing “excess cost growth.” The measure would limit some F-35 deliveries until the Pentagon submits “corrective action plans and acquisition strategies” to improve the F-35 test enterprise.
The proposed bill allows the Air Force to divest 56 A-10 close air support aircraft, consistent with its plans. But it blocks or slows down other fighter jet divestments.
The NDAA allows the retirement of:
- 36 F-15Cs
- 3 F-16s
- No F-22s
- No F-15Es, and it extends that hold through fiscal 2027.
The Air Force wants to retire its Block 20 F-22 jets, which are no longer combat-coded and which it says cost too much to upgrade; officials say its older configuration is inconsistent with combat-coded versions and pilots have to “unlearn” some things when they arrive at operational units. Similarly, USAF wants to cut about half its F-15E fleet with older engines so it can focus on modernizing the rest.
But critics worry that cutting the fighter fleet at all when the Air Force is already its smallest ever is risky. Congress appears to agree.
Air Force officials have argued that keeping “legacy” aircraft longer diverts funding from other more worthy programs, and Congress responded in this measure by authorizing $126 million to “prevent retirement of F-15Es” and easing that burden. It did not fund, however, a Senate proposal to fund depot maintenance, contractor support, and flying hours for the Block 20 F-22s. Those funds will have to come from elsewhere.