SGT Private RallyPoint Member909595<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I have a soldier who is married. Her husband decided to also join the Army and is at basic training now. Since they are now considered dual military, her BAH is now the single rate and not the with-dependent rate. Since the husband is being housed and fed, he does not receive BAH. She resides in on-post housing and they're taking the BAH with-dependent rate from her. The difference in pay is about $200 a month. Does she bite the bullet and pay out of pocket? Finance says because there are no children, they both get the single rate. Housing says they will continue to draw the with-dependent rate. Since her husband will be away for over 5 months (Basic and AIT), does this mean she has to make up the cost of living on her own? Seems like the Army is operating in bad faith. Does anyone know of a way so she doesn't have to pay out of pocket here.Does my soldier bite the bullet and pay out of pocket for this BAH situation?2015-08-21T21:15:02-04:00SGT Private RallyPoint Member909595<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I have a soldier who is married. Her husband decided to also join the Army and is at basic training now. Since they are now considered dual military, her BAH is now the single rate and not the with-dependent rate. Since the husband is being housed and fed, he does not receive BAH. She resides in on-post housing and they're taking the BAH with-dependent rate from her. The difference in pay is about $200 a month. Does she bite the bullet and pay out of pocket? Finance says because there are no children, they both get the single rate. Housing says they will continue to draw the with-dependent rate. Since her husband will be away for over 5 months (Basic and AIT), does this mean she has to make up the cost of living on her own? Seems like the Army is operating in bad faith. Does anyone know of a way so she doesn't have to pay out of pocket here.Does my soldier bite the bullet and pay out of pocket for this BAH situation?2015-08-21T21:15:02-04:002015-08-21T21:15:02-04:00CPT Private RallyPoint Member909606<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Wow, Sarge, sounds like a tough one, I'll have t defer to someone on active duty.Response by CPT Private RallyPoint Member made Aug 21 at 2015 9:17 PM2015-08-21T21:17:58-04:002015-08-21T21:17:58-04:00LCDR Private RallyPoint Member909899<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>The short answer is she should technically be living in the barracks not housing. The long and "right" answer is that housing can figure it out and charge the correct amount until her husband arrives there.Response by LCDR Private RallyPoint Member made Aug 21 at 2015 11:46 PM2015-08-21T23:46:16-04:002015-08-21T23:46:16-04:00MAJ Javier Rivera909961<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>That is an issue for your command team ( CO and 1SG). A visit to the JAG office and a nice talk with housing folks with copies of borh soldiers LESs should do.Response by MAJ Javier Rivera made Aug 22 at 2015 12:46 AM2015-08-22T00:46:56-04:002015-08-22T00:46:56-04:00Maj William Gambrell909984<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>They know they are married...the easy way is to get a legal divorce knowing they still love each other. Marriage is not about a piece of paper. They can both protect the children through Tricare.Response by Maj William Gambrell made Aug 22 at 2015 1:14 AM2015-08-22T01:14:47-04:002015-08-22T01:14:47-04:00Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS910046<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>This is an "administrative" issue more than anything else, however it is a convoluted mess of one that should have been addressed before he went to boot camp.<br /><br />Get the Command Team involved ASAP. What they charge you for housing and what you make for BAH are "independent" but "linked." <br /><br />As an example, if you are a SGT linking on base, you pay $1500/month (made up number) for a house. You get promoted to SSG and now get $1650/month but live in the same house, they STILL take it all. If you get promoted to SFC and it jumps to $1800, still living in the SAME house, they STILL take it all. Yes, you rate a larger house, but because of factors like moving, space available, children, etc, it may not be beneficial for you or the service to move.<br /><br />The same "concept" holds true in reverse, though it is significantly rarer, as demotions just don't happen as often. It comes into play when you have Dual BAH recipients (geobachelors).<br /><br />Getting the command team involved allows you to escalate it to "Base" who in turn can get the "Housing Authority" to waive the difference.Response by Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS made Aug 22 at 2015 2:31 AM2015-08-22T02:31:52-04:002015-08-22T02:31:52-04:00TSgt Kenneth Ellis910062<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I read a letter in Stars and Strips. The man was complaining because his wife was in a short tour to Korea, and he lost her Basic Housing Allowance. So nuts to him, they should have never entered into a contract for a house or Apartment they could not afford.Response by TSgt Kenneth Ellis made Aug 22 at 2015 3:10 AM2015-08-22T03:10:53-04:002015-08-22T03:10:53-04:00MAJ Ken Landgren910454<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Should one qualify for family separation pay?Response by MAJ Ken Landgren made Aug 22 at 2015 11:58 AM2015-08-22T11:58:05-04:002015-08-22T11:58:05-04:002015-08-21T21:15:02-04:00