Defence Pension in India 2026: Complete Guide for Army, Navy & Air Force
Defence pension is a key benefit for personnel serving in the Indian Army, Indian Navy, and Indian Air Force. It ensures financial security after retirement, disability, or death during service. Understanding types of pensions, eligibility criteria, calculation methods, and family benefits is essential for service members and their dependents. This guide provides a comprehensive, up-to-date overview of defence pensions in India 2026, including examples, family pension rules, and reservist pensions.
🪖 What Is Defence Pension?
Defence pension is a regular monetary benefit provided to retired defence personnel and their legal dependents. It is governed by the Department of Ex‑Servicemen Welfare (DESW), Ministry of Defence under:
- Army Pension Regulations (Part I & II)
- Navy Pension Regulations
- Air Force Pension Regulations
- One Rank One Pension (OROP) Scheme Guidelines
These pensions ensure that personnel and their families remain financially secure, regardless of whether the retirement was voluntary, compulsory, due to disability, or after death in service.
🔑 Types of Defence Pension
1. Service Pension
Eligibility:
- Officers: Minimum 20 years of service
- Personnel Below Officer Rank (PBOR): Minimum 15 years of service
Calculation Example:
- Officer retires after 25 years; last drawn basic pay ₹80,000 → Pension = 50% × 80,000 = ₹40,000/month
- PBOR retires after 20 years; last drawn pay ₹50,000 → Pension = 50% × 50,000 = ₹25,000/month
Authority: DESW, Army/Navy/Air Force Pension Regulations
2. Family Pension
Eligibility:
- Spouse, unmarried children (up to 25 years), disabled children (for life), dependent parents (if no spouse/children)
Qualifying Service:
- Officers: Minimum 20 years
- PBOR: Minimum 15 years
- Death in service may qualify regardless of minimum service
Death Scenarios & Pension Rates:
- Death During Active Duty / Operations
- Pension: Special rate 60% of last drawn emoluments
- Example: Officer last pay ₹80,000 → Pension = 60% × 80,000 = ₹48,000/month
- Death During Leave
- If death service-related: Special family pension (60%)
- If death non-service/natural: Ordinary pension (30%)
- Example: Officer last pay ₹80,000 → Pension = 30–60% × 80,000 = ₹24,000–48,000/month
- Death Due to Civil/Non-Service Reasons
- Ordinary pension 30%
- Example: Officer last pay ₹80,000 → Pension = 30% × 80,000 = ₹24,000/month
- Death Attributable to Service / War Casualty
- Pension may be 60–100% of last pay
- Children pension continues until 25 years/unmarried or life if disabled
- Example: Officer killed in action; last pay ₹80,000 → Pension = 60–100% × 80,000 = ₹48,000–80,000/month
- Death After Retirement / Pensioner Death
- Pension continues according to qualifying service at retirement
- Ordinary rate: 30%, Special rate: 50–60%
- Example: Retired officer last pay ₹70,000 → Family pension = ₹21,000–42,000/month
Authority: DESW, Army/Navy/Air Force Pension Regulations
3. Disability Pension
Eligibility:
- Personnel permanently disabled due to service
Example:
- Officer disabled with 40% permanent disability; last drawn pay ₹70,000
- Pension = 50% service pension + 40% disability element = 35,000 + 28,000 = ₹63,000/month
Authority: DESW, Army/Navy/Air Force Pension Regulations
4. Invalid Pension
Eligibility:
- Personnel incapacitated not due to service
- Minimum 15 years for PBOR, 20 years for officers (exceptions may apply)
Example:
- Sailor retires after 16 years; last pay ₹40,000 → Invalid pension = 50% × 40,000 = ₹20,000/month
Authority: DESW, Army/Navy/Air Force Pension Regulations
5. Reservist Pension (Elaborated)
Eligibility:
- PBOR: Combined active + reserve service ≥ 15 years
- Officers: Active service + reserve duties considered case by case
- Includes service in Territorial Army, Army Reserve, or other recognized reserves
Calculation:
- Standard: 2/3 × Last drawn active service pay
Example 1:
- Soldier completes 10 years active + 8 years reserve; last pay ₹35,000 → Pension = 2/3 × 35,000 = ₹23,333/month
Example 2:
- PBOR completes 15 years active + 5 years reserve; last pay ₹40,000 → Pension = 2/3 × 40,000 = ₹26,667/month
Purpose:
- Encourages continued reserve service
- Provides financial security for reserve personnel
- Family pension applies if death occurs during reserve service
- Can be commuted upfront like service pension
Authority: DESW, Army/Navy/Air Force Pension Regulations
6. One Rank One Pension (OROP)
- Ensures personnel of same rank and service length receive same pension irrespective of retirement date
- Revisions every five years
Example:
- Two Captains retired in 2010 & 2020, 20 years each → Pension adjusted to same amount, e.g., ₹50,000/month
Authority: DESW, Ministry of Defence
🪖 Pension Eligibility: Army, Navy & Air Force
| Branch | Officers | PBOR | Minimum Service |
|---|---|---|---|
| Army | 20 years | 15 years | 20/15 years respectively |
| Navy | 20 years | 15 years | 20/15 years respectively |
| Air Force | 20 years | 15 years | 20/15 years respectively |
Note: Death or disability during service may override minimum service requirements
Authority: DESW, Army/Navy/Air Force Pension Regulations
📌 Other Benefits
- Commutation of Pension: Lump sum upfront
- Gratuity: One-time payment at retirement
- SPARSH Pension System: Digital portal for pension management
- Pension Adalats: Forums for grievance resolution
Authority: DESW, Ministry of Defence
📝 Documents Required
- Pension application forms
- Service records & discharge papers
- Death certificate (family pension)
- Bank & identity proofs
- Medical certificates (disability/invalid pension)
- Nomination forms for family pension
Authority: DESW, Ministry of Defence
🏁 Key Takeaways
- Defence pensions include Service, Family, Disability, Invalid, Reservist, and OROP
- Family pension covers death during duty, leave, civil/non-service causes, and post-retirement
- Spouse first, then children (up to 25/unmarried or disabled), then dependent parents
- Pension depends on rank, last pay, qualifying service, and circumstances of death
- OROP ensures same pension for same rank/service across years
- Proper documentation and awareness of DESW rules are essential