Australia Military Starting Pay
What a new Australia military recruit actually takes home — published pay rates, what's included, and what the recruiter brochure doesn't break down.
- ▸Starting grade: Recruit (Private Pay Group 1, during basic training)
- ▸Monthly pay: AUD 2,100
- ▸USD estimate: $1,380/month
Entry-level monthly pay
A newly trained Recruit (Private Pay Group 1, during basic training) in the Australia military earns approximately AUD 2,100/month (roughly USD $1,380/month at recent exchange rates). Minimum ~AU$25,000/year during basic training; rises to ~AU$28,000+ on Initial Employment Training. 3.4% salary increase effective 6 November 2025.
What the brochure pay number includes — and excludes
Published pay figures typically reflect base pay only. The total compensation package usually adds: housing (in-kind during training, allowance afterward), medical/dental care, meals on base, training and uniforms, plus specialty pays (combat, deployment, hazardous duty, language, technical bonuses). Net take-home depends on local tax treatment of military pay.
How pay grows with rank
Pay scales upward with promotion, time in service, and specialty bonuses. Specific pay tables for higher grades are usually published by the relevant defense ministry. For most militaries, sergeant-equivalent pay (with 6–10 years of service) is roughly 1.7–2.2x starting recruit pay.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a Australia soldier earn per month?
A Recruit (Private Pay Group 1, during basic training) earns approximately AUD 2,100/month — about USD $1,380.
Is Australia military pay taxable?
Pay is typically subject to standard national income tax with country-specific exemptions for deployment, combat, or special allowances. Check current tax law.
Does pay include housing and food?
During basic training, yes — both are usually provided in-kind. After training, housing is often via on-base quarters or a separate housing allowance.
- pay-conditions.defence.gov.au ADF Pay Rates (Nov 2025)