Marine Corps Reserve Application – How to Enlist & Apply

Last Updated: April 11, 2026




Updated: April 2025  | Hub: Military Jobs  | Positions: Enlisted Marine, Warrant Officer, Commissioned Officer  | Min Age: 17 (with parental consent)

Marine Corps Reserve Application Guide (2025): How to Enlist and Join

Quick Answer: The Marine Corps Reserve is the part-time component of the U.S. Marine Corps, requiring one weekend per month + two weeks annual training. Drill pay starts at $244/weekend (E-1). To enlist, contact a Marine Corps Reserve recruiter (often co-located with active-duty recruiters), pass the ASVAB (minimum AFQT 31), complete MEPS, attend Marine Corps Recruit Training (MCRD Parris Island or San Diego — 13 weeks, the longest BCT of all branches), and return to your Reserve unit. The Marine Corps Reserve has approximately 99,200 Marines and is known for maintaining the same physical and professional standards as its active-duty counterpart.

Marine Corps Reserve at a Glance

  • Total Strength: ~99,200 Selected Reserve and Individual Ready Reserve Marines
  • Headquarters: Marine Forces Reserve (MARFORRES), New Orleans, Louisiana
  • Recruit Training: 13 weeks — longest BCT of all military branches; same as active-duty Marines
  • Key difference from other reserves: Marine reservists are trained and equipped to the same standard as active-duty Marines — “a Marine is a Marine” regardless of active or reserve status
  • Core MOS categories: Infantry (0300), Motor Transport (3500), Logistics (04), Communications (06), Aviation Ground Support (70)
  • Reserve Centers: ~184 Marine Corps Reserve Center locations nationwide

How to Join the Marine Corps Reserve

Step 1: Contact a Marine Corps Recruiter

Visit marines.com or call 1-800-MARINES to find your nearest recruiting station. Marine Reserve recruiters may be co-located at joint recruiting stations or at your nearest Marine Corps Reserve Center. The initial conversation covers your background, goals, physical readiness, and available MOS in your region’s Reserve units.

Step 2: ASVAB and MEPS

Marine Corps minimum AFQT score is 31 with a high school diploma (50 with GED). The Marines use ASVAB subtests to determine MOS eligibility: General Technical (GT) score determines combat arms eligibility, while Electronics (EL), Skilled Technical (ST), and other composite scores determine specialty roles. Pass your MEPS medical evaluation — Marines have stricter physical standards than many other branches.

Step 3: Recruit Training (Boot Camp)

All Marine enlists — active duty and Reserve — attend the same 13-week Recruit Training at either MCRD Parris Island, SC (Eastern U.S.) or MCRD San Diego, CA (Western U.S.). This is the most physically and mentally demanding BCT of any U.S. military branch. Physical training, drill, weapons qualification, water survival, and the Crucible (a 54-hour final exercise) are all components. After boot camp, attend School of Infantry (SOI) or your MOS school.

Step 4: Return to Reserve Unit

After completing training, you report to your designated Reserve unit for the one-weekend-per-month, two-weeks-per-year drill cycle. Reserve Marines are organized into the same unit types as active-duty (infantry battalions, artillery regiments, air groups) and train to deploy-ready standards.

Marine Corps Reserve Pay Rates (2025)

Marine Corps Reserve Drill Pay — Per Weekend (4 Drill Periods)
Rank Title Weekend Pay Annual Training (14 days)
E-1 Private $244/weekend $856/2 weeks
E-2 Private First Class $274/weekend $959/2 weeks
E-3 Lance Corporal $288/weekend $1,008/2 weeks
E-4 Corporal $319/weekend $1,120/2 weeks
E-5 Sergeant $419/weekend $1,451/2 weeks
O-1 Second Lieutenant $485/weekend $1,697/2 weeks

Requirements

  • Age: 17–29 for enlisted (17 requires parental consent). Marines have a stricter maximum age than other reserve branches — 29 for non-prior service enlisted.
  • Citizenship: U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
  • Education: High school diploma strongly preferred; GED accepted with AFQT of 50+.
  • ASVAB: Minimum AFQT 31 (diploma) or 50 (GED).
  • Physical fitness: Marines have strict physical standards. Before MEPS, you should be able to run 3 miles in under 28 minutes and complete 3 pull-ups. At boot camp you’ll be tested to much higher standards.
  • Physical fitness test: Marines use the Physical Fitness Test (PFT): pull-ups or push-ups, planks, and a 3-mile run. This is different from the Army ACFT and Air Force PFA. Start training before your recruiter screening.

Benefits

  • TRICARE Reserve Select: Health insurance for reservists and families.
  • GI Bill and tuition assistance: Montgomery GI Bill Selected Reserve + Federal Tuition Assistance ($4,500/year).
  • State tuition: Varies by state — many states offer tuition benefits for all reserve component members.
  • Retirement: 20-year pension payable at age 60.
  • Enlistment bonuses: $5,000–$20,000 for qualifying MOS.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Marine Corps boot camp the same for reservists?

Yes — completely identical. There is no “reserve version” of MCRD. Every Marine, regardless of active or reserve status, attends the same 13-week training at Parris Island or San Diego, passes the same standards, and earns the same title. This “one standard” principle is a core Marine Corps value and a major reason Marine reservists deploy as combat-ready forces alongside their active-duty counterparts.

What is the maximum age to join the Marine Corps Reserve?

The Marine Corps has the strictest age limit of all reserve components — 29 years old for non-prior service enlisted. This is 6 years younger than the Army Reserve/Guard limit (35) and 10 years younger than the Army’s maximum (42 for some roles). Prior service veterans may enlist up to age 39 under certain conditions. If you’re 28–29 and considering the Marine Corps Reserve, time is critical — contact a recruiter soon.