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Details of military gap year for UK's under 25s revealed

Details of the government's incoming military gap year programme have been revealed.

The government announced the scheme earlier this year, which is aimed at getting more teenagers interested in serving in the Armed Forces. The i Paper reports that the scheme will open in March 2026 for under 25s and begin with around 150 young people being recruited for placements of up to two years, before expanding to more than 1,000 per year.

It would be a paid gap year, though the amount given to participants has not been revealed. Recruits would not be deployed on active operations.

Specifically, the scheme aims to introduce citizens to military life early, with the hope being that they choose to continue serving afterward - though there would be no obligation, and the scheme will aim to teach participants transferrable skills. The army scheme would see recruits receive 13 weeks of basic training as part of a two-year placement, while the Navy scheme would last one year and provide "profession agnostic" training for sailors, according to The i.

The RAF scheme is less developed, with the branch said to be "scoping" options. Defence Secretary John Healey told the paper the scheme would "give Britain's young people a taste of the incredible skills and training on offer across the Army, Royal Navy and RAF".

He added: "As families come together at this time of year, and young people think about their futures, I want the outstanding opportunities on offer in our armed forces to be part of that conversation in homes across the UK." Read more:Zelenskyy 'doesn't have anything until I've approved it', says TrumpMan discovers architect of the Holocaust was his grandfather The army already offers gap year placements for young people before, during or immediately after university, which last one year, but it has struggled for engagement, with fewer than 10 people enrolling in 2024/25. It is also only available for those considering officer training, whereas the new gap year scheme is expected to be open more widely.

It will take inspiration from a similar scheme in Australia for 17 to 25-year-olds, which saw 664 people enlist in 2023, with a little more than half going on to a permanent role in the country's defence force. Other European countries are also looking to bolster their defence forces amid threats from Russia, with France, Germany and Belgium also introducing schemes this year.

Earlier this month, Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton warned that the UK's "sons and daughters" would need to be "ready" to fight if the country needed them. The stark comments came after his French counterpart, General Fabien Mandon, said that France must be ready for the possibility of losing its children in a potential war with Russia.

In February, a YouGov and Public First poll commissioned by The Times found that only 11% of Gen Z adults in the UK - those aged 18-27 - would choose to fight for their country. The number had halved from the same poll taken 20 years prior with adults in the same age bracket.

Most people in the UK no longer have direct experience of the Armed Forces thanks to the peace that followed the end of the Cold War almost 35 years ago..

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