Young people will be offered a year of paid experience and training in the UK Armed Forces under a new ‘Gap Year’ Foundation Scheme, with recruitment already underway for the Army and Royal Navy, the Ministry of Defence stated.

The scheme is confirmed in the Defence Investment Plan, which states: “Informed by the Australian Defence Force’s ADF Gap Year scheme, Defence will offer young people a year of paid experience and training in the Armed Forces.” Royal Air Force recruitment under the initiative is due to start at the end of this year, according to the plan.

The Australian scheme on which it is modelled has run for more than a decade and offers school leavers a twelve-month paid placement across a range of trades, with participants free to leave at the end of the year or transfer into full-time or reserve service.

The Gap Year initiative forms one strand of a broader recruitment push. “Working with the Department for Work and Pensions, we are opening up opportunities for a career in the military for tens of thousands of young people,” the plan states. Jobcentre staff will be partnered with military personnel to enhance career and training advice, with staff receiving “guidance on immediate opportunities, spanning roles from engineering and cyber, to healthcare and logistics.”

The plan frames the personnel effort as central to the wider transformation, stating: “This Government recognises our warfighting edge comes from our people.” It adds that when forces are sent to do a difficult job, “they need to know they will be fairly paid, have a safe and secure home for their family, can get the medical support they need and have the total backing of Defence.”

The recruitment measures build on changes the Government says have already taken effect. The document points to the largest pay rise in two decades, the scrapping of 100 outdated recruitment policies, free Christmas travel for tens of thousands of personnel, and the extension of 30 hours of free childcare to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, which the Ministry states saves forces’ families up to £6,000 a year.

According to the plan, satisfaction with service life is up by 5 per cent this year compared to 2024, and regular forces numbers are growing for the first time since 2021, with intake exceeding outflow across all three services.

The document also commits to a national conversation campaign on defence and security, which it says will “raise public awareness of the threats to the UK, how Defence deters and protects against them, and why Defence requires support to strengthen the nation’s resilience.”

George Allison
George Allison is the founder and editor of the UK Defence Journal. He holds a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and specialises in naval and cyber security topics. George has appeared on national radio and television to provide commentary on defence and security issues. Twitter: @geoallison

6 COMMENTS

  1. Excellent news.

    Sabbaticals should really be a thing for all of society except of course for the most determined flagellators….

    Happy news for once

  2. As I remember it, when Sunak propsed something very similar Labour said it was just a gimmick of no value to young people. Funny old world 😏

  3. I don’t think I’d be able to get in and apply in time to leave service before Uni, which is a pity.
    Leh, perhaps a paid gap year before entering work?

  4. Why not just go to Uni and join the UOTC? Or, if you are not going to Uni but are unsure about the Forces, join the Reserves. These paths already exist. .On the other hand, if we are really serious about recruiting maybe we should:
    1. Give more tax breaks for Service.
    2. Pay off student loans for Service.
    3. Make more use of bonuses for extended Service and reenlistment.

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