Military Leave Calculator Guide: How Leave Works Before PCS, ETS, and Deployment
Military leave is one of the most useful benefits a service member can plan around. Whether you are preparing for a PCS, looking at an ETS timeline, or trying to understand how much time you may still have before a deployment, a simple leave estimate can make planning much easier.
Most active-duty members earn leave at a standard rate of 2.5 days per month, which adds up to 30 days per year. That number is often the starting point for planning, but real-world leave use depends on your branch, orders, and current leave balance.
Why service members search for a leave calculator
People usually search for a military leave calculator when they want to answer one of these questions:
- How many leave days do I have left this year?
- How much leave will I earn before my ETS?
- Can I use leave for a PCS move or transition period?
- How much leave should I save before a deployment?
That is why a practical calculator page works well as a utility tool and as a content page. It answers a real need and gives people a fast way to estimate their situation.
How military leave typically accrues
In most cases, active-duty members earn annual leave over time. The standard accrual is about 2.5 days per month, but the exact amount can vary depending on your service branch and duty status. If you are not on active duty, the accrual may be different or zero.
It is also helpful to distinguish between:
- Current balance: leave already available in your account
- Leave used: time already taken
- Projected accrual: leave expected to accumulate over the rest of the year
Why this matters before PCS and ETS
Leave planning becomes especially important around a PCS or ETS. Service members often want to use leave to move, travel, recover from a deployment, or prepare for civilian life. A quick estimate can help you understand whether you have enough time left to plan around your transition.
For people nearing separation, planning leave is often tied to terminal leave, out-processing, and final transition tasks. That is why the calculator is useful not just for simple math, but for giving context to the next steps.
How to use the calculator
Start with your current leave balance and the leave you have already used this year. Then enter the number of months remaining and the standard accrual rate. The calculator will estimate how much leave may be available by the end of the year.
If you want a more detailed estimate, you can combine it with your PCS timeline or your ETS countdown so you can see whether you will have enough time for travel or transition support.
Helpful next step
Use our military leave calculator for a quick estimate, then pair it with our PCS move checklist if you are planning a relocation.
Bottom line
Military leave is a practical benefit, but it is also a planning tool. The more clearly you understand your balance, the better you can prepare for PCS, ETS, deployment, or rest and recovery.