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Rank- E1
Occupation- Combat Engineer
New enlistee

2007-10-02 05:44:36 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Military

6 answers

An E-1 in the reserve gets paid .

$173.52 per month. Thats for two 8 hour duty days .

2007-10-02 06:51:32 · answer #1 · answered by jeeper_peeper321 7 · 0 1

While you are enlisted you get 100% tuition assistance, so it is possible to get a degree during your first 4 years. That is only true if you have time, if your in the infantry in the Marines that wont happen if your the guy who hands out towels at the base gym... you probably have time to take classes. If your asking about the GI Bill, then no the money from the GI bill wont cover all the tuition of college. Some tech schools or trade schools do not qualify for the bill. If you get enrolled in a university that qualifies for the GI Bill you have to be enrolled for a certain amount of time and maintain a certain GPA before you start recieving money. You must attend a certain amount of classes (credits/hours) and keep the GPA to continue recieving the money The cost of most schools exceeds the current amount for the GI Bill, but you can qualify for different grants and what not to make up the difference. Remember your recruiter has a job to do, thats recruit and Marines always fullfill orders, so make sure you get what you want in your contract. Most the Marine recruiters are usually straight forward. You need to look at everything that encompasses military life especially being a Marine, before you make a 8 year commitment (all contracts are 4 year active duty with 4 years as an inactive reserve, i dont think you can enlist any other way)

2016-03-19 03:51:37 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Hi. Your MOS doesn't make a difference.You get paid active duty pay while in training. Then you get a little something for your drill weekends. That's why typically you join the Reserves and have your normal civilian job usually while going to college. I don't know exactly how much though.

Good answer YO

2007-10-02 06:02:50 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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You get the GI Bill, it may or may not pay for all of your tuition. They will give you a certain amount for college but depending on the university and rising college costs it might not cover it all. It is also on a time limit so you need to attend college pretty soon after leaving the marines or attend it while you are in.

2016-04-04 00:40:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

$1,203.90 a month for the first four months, then it jumps up to $1,301.40, and that's for all branches of the service. You'll get full pay while you attend basic training and MOS training. After that, you get drill pay. Drill pay for an E-1 with more than four months in is $173.52 per weekend. When you do your annual tour, your pay is determined by how many days of annual tour you do. To figure it out, divide your pay rate by 30 (that'll give you a daily pay rate) and multiply that by the number of days you do for your annual tour.

2007-10-02 05:53:00 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Go to www.military.com, they have pay tables that include drill pay for reservists.

http://www.military.com/benefits/military-pay/reserve-and-guard-pay/reserve-drill-pay-calculator

2007-10-02 05:47:46 · answer #6 · answered by Yo it's Me 7 · 1 0

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