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WHY MANY SERVICE MEMBERS LOSE MONEY ON TDY, EVEN WHEN THEY FOLLOW THE RULES


Three soldiers coil wire in preparation for a special assignment.
Airmen from the 188th Civil Engineer Squadron (CES) are preparing to go to Portugal for a two-week temporary duty (TDY) assignment aimed at enhancing both operational readiness and infrastructure at Lajes Field, a strategic U.S. Air Force installation in the Azores.Jennifer Gerhardt/Air Force
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TDY is supposed to cover your costs. So why do so many service members still come out of pocket, and what should you watch in 2026?

TDY is designed to be financially neutral. You travel for the mission, the government covers the costs, and no one should be worse off for following orders.

Many service members return from TDY with less money or higher credit card balances, even when following all the rules.

If that’s happened to you, the issue usually isn’t a mistake. It’s that the TDY system was built around averages, not how travel actually works in 2026.

Many service members lose money on TDY because reimbursement rates are based on average costs rather than actual expenses. To protect yourself, understand why rates fall short and prepare before your next TDY in 2026.

TDY Reimburses Standardized Costs, Not Real-World Prices

TDY reimbursement is governed by fixed allowances for lodging, meals, and incidental expenses. Those rates are centrally set to keep the system consistent and manageable.

The tradeoff is that standardized rates don’t adjust in real time. They don’t reflect seasonal price spikes, local shortages, or mission-driven constraints that limit where you can stay or eat.

This gap between the allowance and actual expense is where members incur losses.

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Why TDY Feels Worse Now Than It Did Before

TDY hasn’t fundamentally changed, but the environment around it has.

Lodging prices near major installations have climbed faster than per diem updates. Dining costs in high-traffic areas have surged. Training hubs, conferences, and readiness requirements increasingly overlap with peak travel seasons.

Per diem rates change slowly, so sudden real-world cost increases hit service members, not the system.

The TDY serves a dual purpose: ensuring members complete required annual training while simultaneously providing additional construction capabilities for base projects.Jessica Wilson/Air Force

Lodging Caps Are Where Most TDY Losses Begin

Lodging is the single biggest source of out-of-pocket TDY costs.

Per diem lodging caps use geographic averages. Price spikes from demand, limited inventory, or mission timing may make options under the cap impossible.

This happens most often near:

  • Major installations and training centers
  • Urban duty locations
  • Seasonal or event-driven markets
  • Areas with limited government lodging

If government quarters are unavailable, commercial lodging is authorized, but affordability isn’t guaranteed unless approved and documented.

Unclear or outdated base policies often result in out-of-pocket costs that service members don't realize until after a TDY. Knowing policy details and documenting exceptions helps avoid unexpected expenses.

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The Most Expensive TDY Mistake Service Members Make

The most costly TDY mistake isn’t overspending; it’s failing to document constraints early.

When lodging, meals, or transportation options are limited by mission requirements, availability, or command direction, undocumented constraints almost always become personal expenses later.

Meals & Incidental Expenses Lag Behind Reality

Meals and incidental expenses (M&IE) are meant to cover daily necessities. In practice, many service members find the allowance outdated.

Airport prices, few off-base options, set meal times, and long days cut flexibility. When meals are provided, deductions may apply, even if options cost more or have little value.

Over longer TDYs, small daily gaps add up quickly. Knowing how military benefits actually work means recognizing where allowances routinely fall short.

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Reimbursement Timing Creates Real Financial Strain

Even when expenses are eventually reimbursed, timing matters.

Service members often pay for lodging deposits, rental cars, airfare changes, and meals. Voucher delays, due to audits, corrections, or system backlogs, can push reimbursement weeks or months past the TDY.

For junior enlisted members and families already managing PCS or household expenses, that delay can create real financial pressure.

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Who Actually Controls TDY Outcomes

Understanding the power structure over TDY can help you navigate outcomes.

  • Orders define what’s authorized
  • Commands interpret policy locally
  • Approving and reviewing officials decide what’s reimbursable
  • Finance offices enforce compliance, not fairness

That’s why two service members on similar TDY orders can have very different outcomes. Much of TDY success depends on clarity, documentation, and expectations set before travel begins.

TDY outcomes can differ widely depending on local guidance. Ensure you understand your command's expectations to reduce unpleasant surprises.

Who Loses the Most Money On TDY?

TDY-related losses disproportionately affect:

  • Junior enlisted service members
  • Single-income households
  • Members traveling to high-cost locations
  • Those without government travel cards
  • Anyone on extended or recurring TDY

Those who lose the most are often least able to challenge bad decisions or absorb the costs.

What to Watch Closely in 2026

Several trends make TDY planning more important this year:

  • Persistent cost-of-living pressure near major training hubs
  • Increased TDY use tied to readiness and force posture shifts
  • Continued system updates and voucher processing changes
  • Tighter scrutiny of exceptions and approvals

Proactive planning matters more as rules and processing evolve.

How to Reduce Your Risk Before You Travel

You can’t control per diem rates, but you can control preparation.

Before TDY:

  • Confirm lodging availability early
  • Request written exceptions when costs exceed caps
  • Clarify how meals will be handled and deducted
  • Verify funding lines and approval thresholds

During TDY:

  • Keep receipts even when not strictly required
  • Track out-of-pocket costs daily
  • Document mission-driven limitations

After TDY:

  • File vouchers promptly
  • Flag discrepancies immediately
  • Ask clarifying questions early, not after denial

Don’t Let TDY Cost You Money

Losing money on TDY isn’t a personal failure. It’s a planning mismatch in a system designed for averages, not individual realities.

The TDY framework prioritizes consistency and control over precision. That protects budgets, but it leaves many service members absorbing costs the system doesn’t fully recognize.

Knowing where TDY falls short and planning around those gaps is the difference between reimbursement on paper and fairness in practice. In 2026, that awareness matters more than ever.

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Natalie Oliverio

Navy Veteran

Written by

Natalie Oliverio

Veteran & Senior Contributor, Military News at MyBaseGuide

Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 publis...

CredentialsNavy Veteran100+ published articlesVeterati Mentor
ExpertiseDefense PolicyMilitary NewsVeteran Affairs

Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 publis...

Credentials

  • Navy Veteran
  • 100+ published articles
  • Veterati Mentor

Expertise

  • Defense Policy
  • Military News
  • Veteran Affairs

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