31B vs 31A
Military Police (USA) vs Military Police (USA)
Both recruiters said this was "the best job in the Army." Statistically, they can't both be right.
Monday morning. The 31B wakes up and faces this: you'll stand at a gate checking IDs in weather that would make a meteorologist cry, break up barracks fights at 0200, and respond to domestic calls that are heartbreaking and never-ending. The 31A wakes up at the same time and faces this: law enforcement experience on Army installations is real — your soldiers are responding to the same calls civilian police respond to, in communities with elevated rates of domestic violence, substance abuse, and the other consequences of repeated deployments. Both are in the military. Both showed up. The similarity stops being useful around there. The interservice rivalry between these two is less heated than either admits and more real than either denies.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“As a Military Police officer, you'll enforce the law, protect military installations, and conduct tactical operations. You'll earn law enforcement certifications, master investigative techniques, and build a career foundation for federal law enforcement agencies like the FBI, DEA, and Secret Service.”
You will write tickets on post for people going 27 in a 25 and they will look at you like you just keyed their car. You'll stand at a gate checking IDs in weather that would make a meteorologist cry, break up barracks fights at 0200, and respond to domestic calls that are heartbreaking and never-ending. Nobody is happy to see you. Ever. Not even at the DFAC. You're either ruining someone's day or arriving at the worst moment of theirs. The law enforcement skills are real — civilian departments do hire MPs, and federal agencies look favorably on the experience. But nobody warns you that 'police work' on a military installation means you see the same troubled soldiers on repeat until they either get help or get discharged. It wears on you differently than the recruiter mentioned.
“You'll lead military police soldiers in law enforcement, force protection, and combat support operations — a branch that does more in a single deployment than most civilian police officers see in a career. After MP BOLC at Fort Leonard Wood, your assignments will span installation law enforcement, detainee operations, and combat zone security, often simultaneously. FBI, DEA, ATF, and Secret Service actively recruit MP officers. The federal law enforcement pathway from this branch is one of the clearest in the Army, and the security clearance plus the leadership experience accelerates it significantly.”
MP officers command units that do genuinely diverse missions — law enforcement on installations, detainee operations, police intelligence, area security, and combat support functions that put MPs in the middle of complex operational environments. The tension in MP culture is between the law enforcement identity and the combat support identity, and which one dominates depends heavily on the assignment. The war on terror created a generation of MP officers with real combat and detainee operation experience that shaped the branch significantly. Law enforcement experience on Army installations is real — your soldiers are responding to the same calls civilian police respond to, in communities with elevated rates of domestic violence, substance abuse, and the other consequences of repeated deployments. Civilian law enforcement, security management, and federal LE agencies are well-trodden post-Army pathways. The DHS, CBP, and federal agency pipelines recruit MP officers seriously. The branch has a clearer civilian translation than most combat arms branches.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 31B on the left, 31A on the right.
Gate guard duty, patrol, traffic enforcement, investigations, desk sergeant shifts, and training. Shift work is the norm — expect nights, weekends, and holidays. Some 31Bs do criminal investigation support or work with CID.
Leading military police platoons and companies — law enforcement operations, security operations, and detention operations. As a platoon leader: leading patrols, investigations support, and base security operations. As a company commander: managing multiple law enforcement and security missions simultaneously. The work blends traditional law enforcement with military operations.
AIT at Fort Leonard Wood (MO) is about 20 weeks. Covers law enforcement fundamentals, use of force, investigations, traffic management, and detention operations. Practical exercises including simulated crime scenes and patrols. You'll earn a military police credential.
Military Police Basic Officer Leader Course (MPBOLC) at Fort Leonard Wood (MO) is about 18 weeks. Covers law enforcement, security operations, detention operations, and military police investigations. The training provides a foundation in both military and civilian law enforcement principles.
Moderate. Patrolling on foot, vehicle operations, detainee handling, and use-of-force situations. More demanding on deployment when running security operations in full kit.
Moderate. MP officers are expected to maintain combat arms-level fitness. The work involves both office leadership and field law enforcement operations.
Military police is one of the most direct civilian translations in the Army — law enforcement is law enforcement. The recruiter will talk up the investigative work and the career path to federal agencies, and those opportunities are real but competitive. What they won't mention: you will spend a lot of time on gate guard duty. A LOT. Shift work is brutal on relationships and sleep. And being the person who enforces rules on other soldiers doesn't make you popular. The upside is real though: CID experience is gold for federal agencies, and many departments give hiring preference to veterans with MP experience. Just go in with eyes open about the gate duty and shift work.
Military police officer is a branch that offers one of the most direct civilian career translations of any officer specialty. You lead law enforcement and security operations at a scale that civilian police officers rarely experience at the same career stage. What the branch briefer won't mention: a significant portion of the MP mission is base security — gate operations, access control, and traffic enforcement — which is not the most intellectually stimulating work. The interesting assignments (CID, protective services, special operations support) are competitive. The deployment experience is real and varied: detainee operations, area security, and route clearance support. The civilian career path is strong: federal law enforcement agencies, corporate security, and consulting firms all recruit MP officers. The combination of military leadership and law enforcement experience is a powerful credential.
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