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The Follow-On Assignment Option

Servicemembers selected for a dependent-restricted short tour for their second or later assignments can voluntarily apply to participate in the Follow-On assignment program. The Department of Defense designed the Follow-On assignment program to provide all servicemembers, officers and enlisted, with family stability, as well as to decrease permanent change of station costs. The application is a voluntary agreement with the servicemember not to use PCS allowances in exchange for advance assignment consideration of a stateside assignment, before they leave on a dependent-restricted short-tour assignment. If an servicemember chooses a follow on, the family can stay at the current stateside location or elect to move to the location of their follow-on assignment, providing it, too, is stateside. For more information, Air Force personnel can visit myPers . Select 'Any' from the dropdown menu and search 'Follow-On.'

For more Air Force news and information, visit Military.com .

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PCS Season: 5 Things to Know About Unaccompanied Tours

PCS Season

Joe Wallace

What’s an unaccompanied tour? This type of permanent change of station move has the servicemember relocating to a new assignment without “command sponsorship” of a spouse or dependents. It is not the same as a deployment or temporary duty.

In other words, the military family members are not listed on the orders and are not authorized to accompany the service member to the new assignment. An unaccompanied tour is typically outside the continental United States (CONUS), typically lasting one or two years (see below).

5. What it Means to go on an Unaccompanied Tour

Table of Contents

An unaccompanied tour means precisely what the name implies; spouses and dependents are not authorized to join the servicemember in the new location and do not have the support of the local command to be there.

Sometimes, a spouse may decide to travel to the new country regardless. However, no on-base services such as base housing, medical clinics, child care, or employment services are available to non-command-sponsored spouses or dependents.

4. Types of Unaccompanied Tours

There are one-year “hardship” or “remote” tours that have included places like South Korea, Iceland, and Guam.

There are also two-year unaccompanied tours that are more typical duty locations like Germany, Japan, Spain, and elsewhere. Unaccompanied tours lasting two years have different considerations for packing and moving than those lasting just one year.

You may be given an unaccompanied tour as a married service member for a variety of reasons, including the previously mentioned lack of essential services for family members at the gaining base. If you are married and receive PCS orders, you’ll need to ensure your family is command-sponsored if you want them to accompany you overseas. Sometimes command sponsorship is not possible, hence the need for certain unaccompanied tours of duty.

Read more: PCS Season: What is Command Sponsorship for Overseas Tours?

3. Unaccompanied Tours for Single Servicemembers

The single service member may be authorized a certain amount of personal property to be shipped to the overseas location, but much depends on the duration of the assignment. Your weight limits and other options will be explained in out processing appointments, but there is also plenty of information at your losing base’s official site.

Those on a one-year tour may be authorized to ship less of their belongings than those on a two-year tour. Depending on whether the PCS is a hardship assignment or not, single soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, and Guardians with overseas assignments may need to put some of their belongings in storage.

Dislocation Allowance

A single service member traveling to an overseas location may qualify for a Dislocation Allowance, which Defense.gov defines as an allowance designed to “partially reimburse a service member, with or without dependents, for the expenses incurred in relocating the member’s household on a PCS.”

Upon arrival at the new duty station, the service member will be assigned a room in a dorm, barracks, or other ‘single soldier” type living arrangements on post. Single servicemembers, especially junior enlisted, may be required to live on base for their duty at the overseas location.

2. Unaccompanied Tours for Married Service Members

Married service members have more complex options when it’s time to PCS overseas to an unaccompanied tour. The spouse and any dependent children can stay in their current home, and the servicemember will continue to be paid a housing allowance for that location.

Housing Allowance Options

If the family decides to pack up and move, the housing allowance may be based on their new location. There is another option for those who get a remote assignment and a “follow-on” assignment immediately after–in cases where the follow-on location is known, the family may be allowed to move to that duty location and draw a housing allowance there.

That is a common move amongst military families who know it’s an option. Not all PCS moves include a follow-on assignment, and in cases where a follow-on is authorized, the second location may not be assigned right away. Much depends on variables, including mission needs, force protection levels, and other factors.

Family Separation Allowance

One important benefit for military members assigned to an unaccompanied tour? The Family Separation Allowance or FSA.

Defense.gov describes this benefit as designed to “defray a reasonable amount of extra expenses that result from such separation” and is paid monthly. At press time that amount was listed at $250 but this number is always subject to change. Check your base finance office or the latest updates on this allowance.

FSA is not meant to offset the costs of the unaccompanied tour fully but it is “payable in addition to any other allowance or per diem to which a Service member may be entitled,” according to the DoD as long as one of the following is true:

  • Dependents are not authorized to be moved “to or near” the Service member’s permanent duty station at government expense;
  • The military member serves on board a ship away from the home port of the ship for more than 30 continuous days, OR;
  • The military member is on temporary duty for more than 30 continuous days, and the dependents do not reside at or near the temporary duty station.

The FSA is not payable when a service member volunteers for an unaccompanied tour at a location where accompanied tours are authorized. This benefit is not automatic, it must be applied for using DD Form 1561 , Statement to Substantiate Payment of Family Separation Allowance.

1. What to Know About Unaccompanied Tours

In addition to special pay such as the Dislocation Allowance and Family Separation Allowance, you may have special leave benefits when on a remote assignment or even a two-year unaccompanied tour.

If you are at a remote location, you may have a preference for Space-Available flights, and there is a special type of leave offered (depending on your assignment) that could help you get home mid-tour to catch up with family and friends.

Environmental and Morale Leave or EML is “a benefit which utilizes military airlift to provide relief by allowing those eligible to travel on DoD owned and operated aircraft at a higher Space-Available priority while traveling on EML orders.” Ask your gaining unit about EML options there.

About the author

Editor-in-Chief Joe Wallace is a 13-year veteran of the United States Air Force and a former reporter/editor for Air Force Television News and the Pentagon Channel. His freelance work includes contract work for Motorola, VALoans.com, and Credit Karma. He is co-founder of Dim Art House in Springfield, Illinois, and spends his non-writing time as an abstract painter, independent publisher, and occasional filmmaker.

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COMMENTS

  1. PDF Tour Lengths and Tours of Duty OCONUS

    The standard tour length for a DoD Service member stationed OCONUS is 36 months in an accompanied tour and 24 months in an unaccompanied tour. Hawaii and Alaska are exceptions, with a tour length of 36 months for both accompanied and unaccompanied tours. Military Departments or Combatant Commands may provide conclusive evidence that a specific ...

  2. PCS Orders

    Accompanied Tour (with dependents) This means your family is eligible to accompany your Soldier overseas for a 24-month tour. To ensure the new duty station can support your family, Command Sponsorship of dependents must be approved before your family moves overseas. If approved, the full name of each dependent must be listed on orders.

  3. PDF Volume 7A, Chapter 26

    Dependent Relocates When Service Member Assigned to Unaccompanied or Dependent-Restricted Tour at a PDS OCONUS or "Unusually Arduous Sea Duty" Outside the United States 95 Table 26-34. Changes When Government Defers Dependent Travel to Duty Station OCONUS 99 Table 26-35. Government Defers Dependent's Travel to PDS in the CONUS for 139 or ...

  4. PDF Volume 7A, Chapter 27

    2.3.1.1.2. Transportation of dependents is authorized at government expense, but member elects an unaccompanied tour of duty because a dependent cannot accompany the member to, or at that homeport/PDS due to certified medical reasons, regardless of the date on which the member first made the election to serve an unaccompanied tour. 2.3.1.2. FSA ...

  5. PDF AMC PowerPoint Presentation Template

    Tour Election for Overseas (OCONUS) Assignments •Soldiers on assignment to an overseas duty station must elect either an "all others (unaccompanied)" tour or a "with dependents (accompanied)"tour*. -Complete DA Form 5121, Overseas Tour Election Statement. -Read each statement on the form carefully before making the decision.

  6. PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION (PCS) FACT SHEET

    Army G-1 has clarified that the new Permanent Duty Station BAH is payable the day the service member signs in at the new PDS. The ... (FSH TYPE II) - Soldiers who PCS on a Dependents' restricted tour will be entitled to FSA at the rate of $8.33 per day or $250.00 per month. FSA will be started at the new PDS.

  7. PDF Common PCS and Travel Scenarios for Soldiers, DA Civilians, and

    a. Soldier must visit their servicing Military Personnel Divison (MPD) office to change election and amend order to an unaccompanied tour. b. Dependents will remain in place or may be authorized to move to a designated location. Soldier is on an accompanied assignment to an OCONUS location and dependents are authorized concurrent travel

  8. U.S. Army Overseas Service: Tour Length Policy Revision

    Army Regulation 614-30, Army Overseas Service, includes policy and guidance on the tour lengths for overseas areas. This regulation provided guidance for single Soldiers on unaccompanied tours to ...

  9. Overseas Permanent Change of Station For Soldiers

    Unaccompanied Housing (UH): When assigned to a duty station outside of the United States (Foreign), Soldiers in the grade of E-6 and below who are either bona fide single Soldiers or dual military Soldiers serving on separate tours are required to reside in UH. Also, unaccompanied Soldiers with dependents on a Dependent Restricted tour ...

  10. PDF * December 2019 VOLUME 7A, CHAPTER 26: "HOUSING ALLOWANCES" SUMMARY OF

    Table 26-31. Dependent Visits Service Member who is Serving an Unaccompanied or Dependent-Restricted Tour ..... 72 Table 26-32. Dependent Retains Permanent Residence when Service Member Assigned to Unaccompanied or Dependent-Restricted Tour at a PDS OCONUS or

  11. The Follow-On Assignment Option

    Servicemembers selected for a dependent-restricted short tour for their second or later assignments can voluntarily apply to participate in the Follow-On assignment program. The Department of ...

  12. PCS Season: 5 Things to Know About Unaccompanied Tours

    1. What to Know About Unaccompanied Tours. An unaccompanied tour means precisely what the name implies; spouses and dependents are not authorized to join the servicemember in the new location and do not have the support of the local command to be there. Sometimes, a spouse may decide to travel to the new country regardless.

  13. PDF Frequently Asked Questions

    a dependent-restricted tour, including involuntary extension beyond initial tour, to the date the Soldier departed the previous duty station for the dependent-restricted tour or a maximum 14- month credit. Soldiers who obtain Family members during the tour and were separated from hose Family members will receive credit only for time separated.

  14. PDF Frequently Asked Questions

    Yes, upon completion of a dependent-restricted tour, including involuntary extension beyond initial tour, wait list eligibility date will be date departed previous duty station for the dependent-restricted tour or a maximum 14-month credit. Service Members who obtain family members during the tour and were separated from those family members ...

  15. PDF 5536 6457 dedicated professionals. 2349 ENTITLEMENTS

    Service members on dependent restricted tours may be eligible for Family Separation Allowance on be-half of an authorized dependent, such as a spouse or child that the member retains full custody over. FSA is offered as a monthly $250.00 allowance to help offset the hardship of forced separation. Hardship Duty Pay is

  16. PDF Tour Lengths and Tours of Duty OCONUS

    The standard tour length for a DoD Service member stationed OCONUS is 36 months in an accompanied tour and 24 months in an unaccompanied tour. Hawaii and Alaska are exceptions, with a tour length of 36 months for both accompanied and unaccompanied tours. Military Departments or Combatant Commands may provide conclusive evidence that a specific ...

  17. PDF Contact Information

    Welcome to the NRDC-T (This is a one (1) year dependent restricted tour) Welcome to US Army NATO (USANATO). A smooth transition to USANATO begins with good sponsorship. It is imperative that you maintain contact with your assigned sponsor immediately. ... nearest Army Regional Support Element, Alpha Company is located in Izmir, Turkey. This command

  18. PDF AMC PowerPoint Presentation Template

    Tour Election for Overseas (OCONUS) Assignments • Soldiers on assignment to an overseas duty station must elect either an "all others (unaccompanied)" tour or a "with dependents (accompanied)"tour*. - Complete DA Form 5121, Overseas Tour Election Statement. - Read each statement on the form carefully before making the decision.

  19. PDF Per Diem, Travel, and Transportation Allowance Committee 4800 Mark

    A. DoD Service Members. The table below specifies tour lengths OCONUS (in months) for DoD Service members in accordance with DoD Instruction (DoDI) 1315.18 "Procedures for Military Personnel Assignments." Service member dependent-restricted tours are shown as Not Accompanied (NA) in the table.

  20. PDF CONUS ONLINE LEVY BRIEFING

    • Soldiers on assignment to dependent-restricted tours are authorized to move Family members to a designated place, unless participating in the HAAP. • Soldiers who elect to serve an unaccompanied tour are authorized to move Family members to a designated place. • Family members cannot be moved again at Government expense until

  21. PDF Per Diem, Travel, and Transportation Allowance Committee

    A. DoD Service Members. The table below specifies tour lengths OCONUS (in months) for DoD Service members in accordance with DoD Instruction (DoDI) 1315.18 "Procedures for Military Personnel Assignments." Service member dependent-restricted tours are shown as Not Accompanied (NA) in the table.

  22. Dependant Restricted Tour- 6 months to CONUS? : r/army

    AR 614-30, Para 6-1e (2). On dependent-restricted overseas tours must have at least 6 months remaining obligated service upon arrival date at gaining CONUS duty station. You are looking at the difference between DEROS and ETS, which you claim is 7 months. Branch is probably looking at what your expected arrival date (DEROS plus several weeks ...

  23. Military Personnel Division :: USAG Humphreys

    A: Married Army couples who are enrolled in MACP are considered for JD assignments. If you are serving together in a dependent restricted short tour area (Korea) you may apply to occupy a joint house hold, see your S1 for the current processing guidelines.