Armed Forces Bill
Summary
What this is
The Armed Forces Bill 2024-26 (Bill 367) is the quinquennial primary legislation required to continue the Armed Forces Act 2006 beyond its statutory expiry, while also reforming reserve forces recall, expanding the Armed Forces Covenant legal duty, putting a Defence Housing Service on a statutory footing, and modernising service discipline.
Why it matters
Without renewal the Armed Forces Act 2006 would expire on 14 December 2026 (currently extended to that date by the 2025 Continuation Order), removing the statutory basis for the existence and discipline of the Regular and Reserve Forces. The Bill is also the principal vehicle for the Government's June 2025 pledge to expand the Covenant Legal Duty to central government and for the new Defence Housing Service.
Current status
The Bill received first reading on 15 January 2026, second reading on 26 January 2026, was committed to an ad hoc Select Committee which reported on 28-29 April 2026, and is now expected to be re-committed to a Committee of the whole House under the 26 January 2026 Programme Order.
What changed recently
- 13 May 2026 — King's Speech 2026 confirms the Bill as a Government legislative priority alongside the National Security, Tackling State Threats and Cyber Security and Resilience Bills. →
- 29 Apr 2026 — Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026 published its Special Report scrutinising the Bill, including the expanded Covenant Legal Duty. →
- 30 Apr 2026 — Select Committee Formal Minutes published, closing the Select Committee stage. →
- 22 Apr 2026 — Ministry of Defence Police (Vetting) Regulations 2026 (SI 2026/428) made — operationalises MDP vetting framework alongside the Bill. →
- 16 Apr 2026 — Select Committee Amendment Paper published with substantive Opposition and Liberal Democrat amendments on reserve recall age (65→67), medical-discharge exemption, single living accommodation standards and a Veterans' Mental Health Oversight Officer. →
Key documents
Framework
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Armed Forces Bill 2024-26 (Bill 367, as introduced)
The Bill itself: continues the Armed Forces Act 2006, amends it on Covenant, Defence Housing, Reserve Forces and discipline, and makes provision for service complaints.
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Explanatory Notes (Bill 367 EN)
Departmental explanation of the Bill's provisions clause-by-clause.
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Delegated Powers Memorandum
MoD memorandum identifying delegated powers in the Bill — the document the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee will scrutinise.
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ECHR Memorandum
MoD's human rights memorandum on Convention compatibility — relevant given the Opposition NC13/NC15 amendments engaging Article 15 derogation and ECHR application to deployed reservists.
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King's Speech 2026: announcement of the Armed Forces Bill
King's Speech 2026 confirming the Government's intent to bring forward the Bill renewing the 2006 Act and placing the Covenant on a fuller statutory footing.
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MoD announcement: New Defence Housing Service (15 January 2026)
MoD news announcement at Bill introduction explaining that the Bill puts the new Defence Housing Service into law as part of the largest renewal of military housing in a generation.
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WMS (HCWS747): Pledge to protect Armed Forces community through new Covenant Legal Duty
Al Carns, then Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Veterans and People, set out the Government's pledge to expand the Covenant Legal Duty in the forthcoming Bill.
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MoD announcement: New powers for Defence personnel to defeat drones near bases (2 Feb 2026)
Government announcement framing the Bill's defence-drones provisions following a doubling of drone incidents near bases.
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MoD announcement: Major boost to skilled former military personnel called upon in crises (15 Jan 2026)
MoD announcement at introduction explaining the Bill's reserve recall reforms to expand the pool of former Service personnel available in crises.
Statutory basis
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Armed Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order 2025 (SI 2025/1096)
Continues the 2006 Act in force until 14 December 2026 pending enactment of the new Bill — the statutory clock the Bill must beat.
Operationalising
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Armed Forces Commissioner (Service Complaints Investigations) Regulations 2026 (SI 2026/24)
Operationalises the new Armed Forces Commissioner's service complaints investigation power under AFCA 2025.
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Armed Forces Commissioner (Family Definition etc.) Regulations 2026 (SI 2026/372)
Defines 'relevant family member' for AFCA 2025 purposes and makes transitional provision.
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Ministry of Defence Police (Vetting) Regulations 2026 (SI 2026/428)
Requires every MDP officer to hold and maintain vetting clearance — complements service discipline reforms in the Bill.
Implementation
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Legislative Consent Motion agreed by the Scottish Parliament
Scottish Parliament LCM on the Bill — necessary devolution-settlement step given service-justice and Covenant touch-points in devolved areas.
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WMS (HCWS1078): New Director of Service Prosecutions
Louise Sandher-Jones, then Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Defence, announced the appointment under s.364 of the 2006 Act — the senior service-justice office whose framework the Bill amends.
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JSP 831: Redress of individual grievances — service complaints
Departmental guidance on the service complaints system the Bill (with AFCA 2025) reforms.
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Armed Forces Covenant Duty Statutory Guidance
Statutory guidance to public bodies on the existing Covenant Duty — baseline that will be revised once the Bill expands the Duty.
Scrutiny
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Select Committee Amendment Paper, 16 April 2026
Final Select Committee amendment paper containing the Mike Martin/Ian Roome (Lib Dem) and Mark Francois (Con) amendment packages on retention reporting, reserve recall age, single living accommodation, medical records on discharge, and ECHR derogation.
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Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026: Special Report
The ad-hoc Select Committee's Special Report on the Bill, with a primary focus on the extension of the Covenant Legal Duty.
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Formal Minutes of the Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026
Procedural record of the Select Committee's votes and divisions on Bill amendments.
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Government Response to the Defence Committee's Covenant report (HC 1034)
MoD response accepting the recommendation to legislate for an expanded Covenant Legal Duty.
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Commons Library Briefing CBP-10471: Armed Forces Bill 2024-26
Library briefing on the Bill following Select Committee report — the primary neutral synthesis of the Bill's contents and amendment debate.
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Commons Library Briefing CBP-9072: The Armed Forces Covenant and its status in law
Library briefing tracing how the Covenant has moved from a non-statutory commitment to a statutory duty under the 2021 Act and now an expanded duty under the 2026 Bill.
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Letter from the Chair to the Minister for the Armed Forces (21 January 2026)
Pre-Second Reading correspondence from the Select Committee Chair to the Armed Forces Minister.
Evidence
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Armed Forces Bill 2026: impact assessments
Impact assessment package accompanying the Bill.
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Defence Committee 4th Report: The Armed Forces Covenant (HC 572)
Substantive evidence base feeding into the Bill's expanded Covenant Legal Duty, recommending extension to all Government departments and the devolved administrations.
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Armed Forces Covenant Annual Report 2025
14th statutory annual Covenant report — the live baseline against which the Bill's expansion of the Legal Duty will be judged.
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Service Justice System review (Lyons review)
MoD-commissioned review of the Service Justice System whose recommendations underpinned the 2021 Act's reforms and continue to inform the current Bill's discipline measures.
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Strategic Defence Review 2025 - Making Britain Safer
Root-and-branch defence review forming the strategic backdrop for the Bill's reserve-readiness and personnel-retention provisions.
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Memorandum from the Ministry of Defence on the Armed Forces Bill
MoD memorandum to the Select Committee setting out the Department's case on each clause.
Stakeholders
Sponsoring department 1
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Ministry of Defence
→ src
Lead committee 4
Witnesses & evidence-givers 2
Commentator 7
Political commitments
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commitment King's Speech announcement
Armed Forces Bill to renew the 2006 Act and place the Covenant on a fuller statutory footing
Why linked: The King's Speech 2026 confirmed the Bill as a Government legislative priority for the defence portfolio.
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commitment Ministerial statement
Pledge to expand the Armed Forces Covenant Legal Duty
As we mark Armed Forces Week, we celebrate the brave personnel that keep us safe every day…
Why linked: HCWS747 set out the Government's June 2025 pledge to legislate for an expanded Covenant Legal Duty in the forthcoming Bill.
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commitment Ministerial statement
Statutory Defence Housing Service
New Defence Housing Service to be put into law, turbocharging biggest renewal of military housing in a generation.
Why linked: MoD announcement at Bill introduction explaining the statutory footing for the Defence Housing Service.
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commitment Ministerial statement
Stronger powers for Defence personnel to defeat drones near bases
The security of key military sites will be strengthened as Defence personnel will be given stronger powers to defeat drones near bases…
Why linked: MoD news announcement on the Bill's defence-drones provisions following a doubling of drone incidents near military sites.
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commitment Ministerial statement
Expanded pool of former Service personnel available in crises
The Armed Forces Bill will grow the pool of former Service personnel who Defence could draw on in times of crisis…
Why linked: MoD news announcement at Bill introduction on the reserve recall reforms.
Open questions & gaps
Pending in the lifecycle
- Re-committal of the Bill to a Committee of the whole House and any further proceedings on Consideration and Third Reading under the 26 January 2026 Programme Order.
- Lords stages — Second Reading, Committee, Report and Third Reading — none yet visible in the events list.
- Royal Assent before 14 December 2026, when the Armed Forces Act 2006 currently expires under SI 2025/1096.
- Revised Covenant statutory guidance to reflect the expanded Legal Duty once the Bill is enacted.
Beyond the corpus
- FOUND Pension Schemes Bill
- FOUND Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
- FOUND Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill — Select Committee report: 52nd Report of the Delegated Powers and Regulatory …
- MISSING Government Response to the Select Committee Special Report (HC 1712) —
Confidence gaps
- Precise clause-by-clause architecture of the Bill is not fully exposed in the events list; the Bill 367 text and Explanatory Notes are cited but their substantive content is summarised only via secondary documents.
- Whether any of the Lib Dem retention/housing or Conservative ECHR-derogation new clauses were accepted at Select Committee stage cannot be confirmed without reading the proceedings papers (28831).
Full timeline
2412026
HL Bill 36 Explanatory Notes
Human Rights Memorandum by the Ministry of Defence (updated)
Delegated Powers Memorandum: Memorandum from the Ministry of Defence (updated)
Explanatory Notes: Bill 003 EN 2026-27 - pdf
King's Speech 2026: Justice
Why linked: Duplicate/alternative version of King's Speech 2026 Justice briefing; essential parliamentary research document on the bill's legislative context
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2026-0019) This briefing explores what announcements the government could make in the King’s Speech on 13 May 2026 about justice.
King's Speech 2026: Justice
Why linked: King's Speech 2026 Justice briefing (Lords Library Note) will directly address announcements on the Armed Forces Bill, service justice reform, and related legislative proposals from the 13 May 2026 King's Speech
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2026-0019) This briefing explores what announcements the government could make in the King’s Speech on 13 May 2026 about justice.
King's Speech 2026: Defence
Why linked: Lords Library Note on King's Speech 2026 Defence briefing, directly anticipating the Armed Forces Bill announcement
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2026-0010) This briefing explores what announcements the government could make in the King’s Speech on 13 May 2026 on defence.
King's Speech 2026: Defence
Why linked: Lords Library Note on King's Speech 2026 Defence briefing, directly anticipating the Armed Forces Bill announcement (duplicate entry)
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2026-0010) This briefing explores what announcements the government could make in the King’s Speech on 13 May 2026 on defence.
Armed Forces Bill 2024-26
Why linked: Commons Library briefing CBP-10471 on the present Bill — primary independent scrutiny baseline.
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-10471) The Select Committee of the Armed Forces Bill 2024-26 reported on 29 April 2026.
Formal Minutes of the Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026
Why linked: Formal Minutes of the Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026—parliamentary scrutiny document essential to understanding legislative intent and committee position.
Formal Minutes of the Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026—parliamentary scrutiny document essential to understanding legislative intent and committee position.
Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill: Special Report on the Armed Forces Bill 2026
Why linked: Filled the "Armed Forces Covenant implementation and veteran support provisions" gap via web research
The ad hoc Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026 special report scrutinising the Bill's provisions, with a primary focus on the extension of the Armed Forces Covenant legal duty (Clause 2) to new policy areas and to Whitehall …
Armed Forces Bill 2026: impact assessments
Why linked: MoD impact assessments accompanying the Bill (2 March 2026).
Impact assessments of the Armed Forces Bill 2026.
Memorandum from the Ministry of Defence on the Armed Forces Bill
Why linked: MoD Memorandum on the Armed Forces Bill to the Defence Committee.
Direction: unknown
Human rights memorandum: Memorandum by the Ministry of Defence
Delegated Powers Memorandum: Memorandum from the Ministry of Defence
Explanatory Notes: Bill 367 EN 2024-26
2025
The Armed Forces Covenant and its status in law
Why linked: Commons Library briefing CBP-9072 on the Covenant's legal status — directly anchors Clause 2 analysis.
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-9072) The Armed Forces Covenant is a statement of the moral obligation which exists between the nation, the government and the armed forces.
4th Special Report – Government response to The Armed Forces Covenant report
Why linked: Filled the "Armed Forces Covenant implementation and veteran support provisions" gap via web research
26th Report - Draft Legislative Reform (Disclosure of Adult Social Care Data) Order 2025; Armed Forces Commissioner Bill: Government Response
Why linked: DPRRC 26th Report 2024-26 covering the Armed Forces Commissioner Bill Government Response — directly interlocks with this Bill's service complaints architecture.
DPRRC 26th Report 2024-26 covering the Armed Forces Commissioner Bill Government Response — directly interlocks with this Bill's service complaints architecture.
4th Report – The Armed Forces Covenant
Why linked: Defence Committee 4th Report on the Covenant (HC 572) — substantive evidence base for Clause 2.
Defence Committee 4th Report on the Covenant (HC 572) — substantive evidence base for Clause 2.
17th Report - Armed Forces Commissioner Bill; House of Lords (Peerage Nominations) Bill [HL]; Church of Scotland (Lord High Commissioner) Bill
Why linked: Defence Committee report on Armed Forces Commissioner Bill (2025) – related armed forces governance reform; however, note this is a separate Commissioner Bill, not the Armed Forces Bill itself. Include as adjacent armed forces justice/governance scrutiny
Defence Committee report on Armed Forces Commissioner Bill (2025) – related armed forces governance reform; however, note this is a separate Commissioner Bill, not the Armed Forces Bill itself. Include as adjacent armed forces justice/governance scrutiny
2021
Armed Forces Bill 2021-2022: Lords amendments
Why linked: Commons Library briefing on the 2021 Armed Forces Bill Lords amendments — direct precedent for the Lords stages this Bill is heading into.
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-9392) The House of Commons rejected two amendments made to the Armed Forces Bill in the House of Lords. At their consideration of the Commons reasons for rejecting the changes, two amendments in lieu were proposed …
7th Report - Armed Forces Bill; Critical Benchmarks (References and Administrators’ Liability) Bill [HL]
Why linked: 7th Report referencing Armed Forces Bill - potential scrutiny record though title incomplete
7th Report referencing Armed Forces Bill - potential scrutiny record though title incomplete
Briefing for Lords stages
Why linked: Lords Library Note briefing for Lords stages of Armed Forces Bill, covering parliamentary consent extension and substantive provisions
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2021-0020) The bill would extend parliamentary consent for the armed forces for a further five years, along with other provisions. This briefing considers: the background to the bill; what it would do and what happened during …
Armed Forces Bill 2021-22: Progress of the Bill
Why linked: Commons Briefing Paper tracking Armed Forces Bill 2021-22 parliamentary progress through committee and remaining stages
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-9234) The Armed Forces Bill 2021-22 completed Committee of the Whole House on 23 June 2021. Remaining stages are yet to be scheduled.
The Armed Forces Bill – Report of the Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill (HC 1281, 2021)
Why linked: Filled the "Service complaints procedures and redress mechanisms" gap via web research
The Special Report of the ad-hoc Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2021, which scrutinised the Bill across three areas including the Service Complaints System, welcoming efforts to speed up the complaints process while recommending safeguards for fair access …
Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill Formal Minutes
Why linked: Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill Formal Minutes (2021-04-23)
Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill Formal Minutes (2021-04-23)
Special Report of Session 2019–21: The Armed Forces Bill
Why linked: Special Report of Session 2019-21 on Armed Forces Bill - parliamentary scrutiny record
Special Report of Session 2019-21 on Armed Forces Bill - parliamentary scrutiny record
The Armed Forces Bill 2019 - 2021
Why linked: Commons Briefing Paper on Armed Forces Bill 2019-21 covering background, scope and key issues
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-9128) This briefing paper sets out the background to the Armed Forces Bill 2019-21. This Bill has its Second Reading in the House of Commons on 8 February 2021.
The review of the service justice system
Why linked: Library briefing on the Service Justice System review — directly relevant evidence base for Bill discipline measures.
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-9118) The next quinquennial Armed Forces Bill is due in 2021. In 2017 the Ministry of Defence commissioned a review of the service justice system in preparation for the Bill. This paper explains what the Service …
2018
Armed Forces Covenant
Why linked: Commons Debate Pack on Armed Forces Covenant 2018, directly addresses the Covenant which is central to the 2026 Bill's statutory footing objective
Type: Commons Debate Pack (CDP-2018-0256) A general debate on the ‘Armed Forces Covenant’ has been scheduled for Thursday 22 November 2018 in the Main Chamber.
2016
Armed Forces Bill 2015-16: Lords amendments
Why linked: Commons Briefing Paper on Armed Forces Bill 2015-16 Lords amendments - formal legislative analysis
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-7583) The Armed Forces Bill 2015-16 returns to the House of Commons on 11 May 2016 for consideration of Lords amendments. This briefing paper provides information on these amendments.
Armed Forces Bill 2015–16: Briefing for Lords Stages
Why linked: Lords Library Note briefing on Armed Forces Bill 2015-16 - parliamentary scrutiny documentation (duplicate of 211919)
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2016-0005) This briefing provides information in support of the House of Lords consideration of the Armed Forces Bill.
Armed Forces Bill 2015–16: Briefing for Lords Stages
Why linked: Lords Library Note briefing on Armed Forces Bill 2015-16 - parliamentary scrutiny documentation
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2016-0005) This briefing provides information in support of the House of Lords consideration of the Armed Forces Bill.
2015
Armed Forces Bill 2015‑16
Why linked: Commons Briefing Paper on Armed Forces Bill 2015-16 explaining the five-yearly bill mechanism and military law framework
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-7324) The five-yearly Armed Forces Bill provides the legal basis for the UK's armed forces and its system of military law.
2014
Defence Reform Bill: Lords Amendments
Why linked: Standard Note on Defence Reform Bill Lords Amendments 2014 - parliamentary scrutiny documentation
Type: Standard Note (SN06869) The Defence Reform Bill provides for the reform the way in which the Ministry of Defence procures equipment and support for the Armed Forces and, separately, extends the scope for the use of the Reserve Forces. …
2013
Report Stage and Third Reading of the Defence Reform Bill
Why linked: Standard Note on Defence Reform Bill Report and Third Reading - legislative analysis
Type: Standard Note (SN06768) Report Stage and Third Several amendments were tabled prior to Report stage, including one which sought to impose an obligation on the Government to report on the viability and cost-effectiveness of the plan to increase the …
Defence Reform Bill
Why linked: Research Briefing on Defence Reform Bill 2013 - initial policy context and background
Type: Research Briefing (RP13-45) The Defence Reform Bill was introduced in the House of Commons on 3 July 2013. Second Reading has been tabled for 16 July 2013.
2011
Lords Amendments
Why linked: Standard Note on Armed Forces Bill Lords Amendments 2011 - legislative scrutiny record
Type: Standard Note (SN06083) Six amendments to the Armed Forces Bill were agreed at Lords Third Reading which took place on 10 October, including several tabled or supported by the Government. This note briefly examines those amendments.
2010
Armed Forces Bill [Bill 122 of 2010-11]
Why linked: Research briefing on Armed Forces Bill 2010-11, providing historical context on service justice framework and legal basis for Armed Forces – directly relevant to understanding the statutory basis being reformed
Type: Research Briefing (RP10-85) The purpose of the Armed Forces Bill is to provide the legal basis for the Armed Forces and the system of military law which exists in the UK. It also offers an opportunity to make necessary …
2005
Background to the forthcoming Armed Forces Bill.
Why linked: Research paper on background to forthcoming Armed Forces Bill 2005, provides historical legislative context on service justice framework evolution
Type: Research Paper (RP05-75)
2004
Defence White Paper
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Defence White Paper
Type: Research Paper (RP04-71) The Defence White Paper. House of Commons Library Research Paper 04/71.
2001
Armed Forces Bill (Bill 4 2000/01)
Why linked: Research paper on Armed Forces Bill 2000/01, provides earlier legislative precedent for service justice framework reform
Type: Research Paper (RP01-03) The Armed Forces Bill (Bill 4 of 2000/01). House of Commons Library Research Paper 01/03.
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Analyst briefing
Executive summary
The Armed Forces Bill 2024-26 (Bill 367) is the quinquennial renewing measure for the Armed Forces Act 2006 and the principal Labour Government vehicle for expanding the Armed Forces Covenant Legal Duty, creating a statutory Defence Housing Service and modernising reserve recall 12. It must reach Royal Assent before 14 December 2026, when the 2006 Act's continuation under the Armed Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order 2025 (SI 2025/1096) expires 3. First Reading was on 15 January 2026 and Second Reading on 26 January 45. The Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026, chaired by Clive Efford, published its Special Report (HC 1712) on 28 April 2026 and Formal Minutes on 30 April 67. The King's Speech 2026 reconfirmed the Bill as a Government legislative priority 8. Re-committal to a Committee of the whole House, Consideration and Third Reading remain to be taken in a single sitting day under the 26 January 2026 Programme Order 9.
Current state
The Bill sits between Select Committee and re-committal. The Select Committee took oral evidence across six sittings in March-April 2026 and a seventh sitting on 16 April 1, working from successive amendment papers culminating in the 16 April 2026 paper 2. Its Special Report (HC 1712) is the lead scrutiny document and is grounded in the Defence Committee's earlier HC 572 report on the Covenant 34. The supporting MoD package — Bill text 5, Explanatory Notes 6, Delegated Powers Memorandum 7, ECHR Memorandum 8, impact assessments 9 and the Departmental memorandum to the Select Committee 10 — frames the policy choices for re-committal. A series of operationalising statutory instruments sits alongside the Bill: SI 2026/24 on Armed Forces Commissioner service complaints investigations 11, SI 2026/372 on family definition under the Commissioner Act 12, SI 2026/428 on Ministry of Defence Police vetting 13, and SI 2026/166 amending the RAF Terms of Service Regulations 2007 14. The Scottish Parliament has agreed an LCM 15. The Armed Forces Covenant Annual Report 2025 16, laid by John Healey via HCWS1181 17 and by Lord Coaker via HLWS1184 18, provides the live baseline for the expanded Covenant Duty the Bill enacts.
Recent developments
Three developments dominate the last six months. First, the Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026 reported on 28-29 April 2026, focusing its Special Report (HC 1712) on the expanded Covenant Legal Duty 12. Second, the 16 April 2026 Select Committee Amendment Paper crystallised the Opposition and Liberal Democrat amendment packages: Mike Martin and Ian Roome's amendments on annual retention reporting (NC4-NC5), single living accommodation standards (NC1, amending the Renters' Rights Act 2025), a statutory Veterans' Mental Health Oversight Officer (NC2), and medical records on discharge (NC3); and Mark Francois's substantial Conservative package raising the reserve service age to 67 (Amendments 20-21), extending recall duration (Am. 22), creating reserved-occupation exemptions (Am. 23), a National Veterans' Commissioner for England (NC6), a Forces Housing Association feasibility study (NC7), and reinstating the Article 15 ECHR derogation duty for overseas operations (NC13) 3. Third, two operationalising SIs — the Armed Forces Commissioner Family Definition Regulations (SI 2026/372) and the MDP Vetting Regulations (SI 2026/428) — were made in March-April 2026 45, pre-positioning the regulatory machinery the Bill's wider service-justice reforms presuppose.
What to watch
The dominant fixed point is the 14 December 2026 expiry of the Armed Forces Act 2006 under SI 2025/1096 1 — without Royal Assent before that date, the statutory basis for the Regular and Reserve Forces lapses. The 26 January 2026 Programme Order compresses re-committal, Consideration and Third Reading into a single sitting day 2, so the practical critical path is Lords passage in autumn 2026 3. The Government response to the Select Committee Special Report (HC 1712) is the next major Government document expected; analysts should watch for whether it accepts any of the Lib Dem amendments on housing standards and medical discharge or the Conservative amendments on reserve age and ECHR derogation 45. Legislative Consent Motions from the Welsh Senedd and Northern Ireland Assembly are expected to follow the agreed Scottish LCM 6. The Defence Committee 4th Report (HC 572) line that the expanded Legal Duty should reach the devolved administrations 7 will be tested against the actual final clause text. The Armed Forces Covenant Annual Report 2026 — the 15th statutory report — is due late in the year and will be the first to land against the expanded Duty if Royal Assent is achieved 8. Watch also for further operationalising SIs on Reserve Forces recall mechanics, which the Bill amends but which require detailed sub-regulations to take effect 9.
Risks and uncertainties
Three risks dominate. First, the 14 December 2026 deadline under SI 2025/1096 is unforgiving 1: any Lords disagreement or ping-pong dispute could force emergency continuation legislation. Second, the ECHR territory contested in NC13 and NC15 reopens the Overseas Operations Act 2021 debate and could attract Joint Committee on Human Rights scrutiny — the ECHR Memorandum 2 is the primary corpus document on Convention compatibility but no JCHR report is yet visible in the events list. Third, the Bill engages devolved competence on Covenant delivery, healthcare and housing, and only the Scottish LCM is recorded 3; the Welsh and Northern Ireland positions are not yet in the corpus. Inferred from corpus gap: the events list contains no Government Response to the Select Committee Special Report (HC 1712) and no Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee report on the 2024-26 Bill itself, so the DPRRC's view on the Bill's significant delegated powers remains unread. The Bill text and Explanatory Notes are cited but their substantive content is summarised here via secondary documents rather than the primary text.
Scope notes
This briefing covers the Armed Forces Bill 2024-26 specifically — its service-justice, Covenant, Defence Housing, Reserve Forces and discipline provisions. The separate Armed Forces Commissioner Act 2025 and its operationalising SIs (SI 2026/24, SI 2026/372) are referenced as the immediately adjacent statutory architecture but the Commissioner Bill itself is a separate thread. The Strategic Defence Review 2025 1 provides the strategic backdrop for reserve readiness and personnel retention but is not within the Bill's scope. Defence procurement, equipment policy, military operations and the Defence Industrial Strategy fall outside this thread.
Primary legislation
Bills and Acts this regime substantively depends on. Links go to the bill's own thread on this site (where available) and to bills.parliament.uk.
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The Bill itself: continues the Armed Forces Act 2006 and amends it on Covenant, Defence Housing, Reserve Forces and service discipline.
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Armed Forces Act 2006 Parent regime
The parent statute the Bill renews and amends; s.382 sets the continuation cycle that anchors the legislative deadline.
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Immediate predecessor quinquennial Act (Royal Assent 15 December 2021), which created the existing Covenant Legal Duty in Part 16A and reformed service justice following the Lyons review.
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Armed Forces Commissioner Act 2025 Related framework
Creates the Armed Forces Commissioner office whose service-complaints architecture (operationalised by SI 2026/24 and SI 2026/372) sits alongside the Bill's discipline reforms.
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Reserve Forces Act 1996 Amending Act
The Bill amends the 1996 Act's recall and call-out provisions, with Clause 33 changes to age limits, recall duration and the recallable pool.
Legal & Policy Framework
The Armed Forces Bill 2024-26 operates within a tightly-engineered statutory cycle: section 382 of the Armed Forces Act 2006 provides that the Act expires every year unless continued, with continuation orders permitted only up to a five-year ceiling that itself requires a new Armed Forces Act. The Armed Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order 2025 (SI 2025/1096) carries the regime forward to 14 December 2026; the present Bill must reach Royal Assent before that date or the legal basis for the Regular and Reserve Forces lapses. That hard deadline disciplines everything else in the lifecycle.
On top of that continuity function, the Bill amends three layers of the existing service framework. First, the service-justice layer: court-martial procedures, the Director of Service Prosecutions appointment under s.364, MoD Police vetting (SI 2026/428), and service complaints (now flowing through the new Armed Forces Commissioner created by AFCA 2025 and operationalised by SI 2026/24 and SI 2026/372). Second, the personnel layer: reserve recall under the Reserve Forces Act 1996, terms of service under the 2007 Regulations (amended by SI 2025/218 and SI 2026/166), and a new statutory Defence Housing Service. Third, the Covenant layer: Part 16A of the 2006 Act is broadened so that the 'due regard' duty bites on additional central-government bodies, responding directly to the Defence Committee's HC 572 recommendation.
The Bill follows the historic procedure for quinquennial Armed Forces Bills: after Second Reading it is committed not to a Public Bill Committee but to an ad hoc Select Committee with witness-evidence powers (Clive Efford's committee, which reported in HC 1712 on 28-29 April 2026), and is then recommitted to a Committee of the whole House for line-by-line scrutiny. The 26 January 2026 Programme Order disapplies Standing Order 83B and compresses Committee, Consideration and Third Reading into a single sitting day.
Devolution-settlement work runs alongside: the Bill extends UK-wide and engages devolved competence on Covenant delivery, healthcare and housing. The Scottish Parliament has agreed an LCM (event 28822); Wales and Northern Ireland are expected to follow. The Lords ECHR memorandum (event 28818) is the doctrinal anchor against which the Opposition NC13 (Article 15 derogation duty) and NC15 (reservist ECHR exemption) amendments are tested — both would re-open the territory contested during passage of the Overseas Operations Act 2021.
The regime therefore reads as continuity-with-reform: the same statutory cycle that has run since 2006, with discrete reforms layered into service justice, reserve readiness, Covenant scope and defence housing, plus a new defence-drones strand introduced in early 2026 in response to the doubling of drone incidents near bases.
Statutory basis
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Armed Forces Act 2006, s.382
Provides that the 2006 Act expires one year after the most recent Armed Forces Act was passed unless continued by Order in Council, requiring a quinquennial renewing Act.
The Armed Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order 2025 -
Armed Forces Act 2006, Part 16A (Armed Forces Covenant)
Imposes the existing 'due regard' Covenant Legal Duty on specified public bodies in housing, healthcare and education; the Bill expands this Duty.
The Armed Forces (Covenant) Regulations 2022 -
Armed Forces Act 2006, s.364
Provides for appointment of the Director of Service Prosecutions by His Majesty the King — the head of the Service Prosecuting Authority.
New Director of Service Prosecutions -
Armed Forces Commissioner Act 2025, amending AFA 2006 Part 14A
Establishes the Armed Forces Commissioner with powers of own-motion investigation into service complaints and welfare matters.
The Armed Forces Commissioner (Service Complaints Investigations) Reg… -
Reserve Forces Act 1996 (as amended)
Provides the statutory basis for reserve forces recall and call-out, which the Bill amends to expand the recall pool and adjust readiness categories.
Armed Forces Bill — Amendment Paper: Select Committee Amendments as a…
Cross-cutting regimes engaged
- Human Rights Act 1998 / European Convention on Human Rights The ECHR memorandum (event 28818) addresses Convention compatibility, and Opposition new clauses NC13 (Article 15 derogation duty) and NC15 (deployed reservist exemption) directly contest the HRA's application to overseas operations and deployed reservists.
- Renters' Rights Act 2025 Lib Dem NC1 would amend the 2025 Act to apply MoD accommodation standards to single living accommodation — a direct cross-cutting amendment.
- Sexual Offences Act 2003 (SHPOs, SROs) and protective-order regime Opposition NC12 would empower service courts to make sexual harm prevention orders, sexual risk orders, domestic abuse protection orders and stalking protection orders on persons who leave service before trial — engaging the civilian protective-order regime directly.
- Devolution settlements (Scotland Act 1998, Government of Wales Act 2006, Northern Ireland Act 1998) Covenant Duty delivery, healthcare and housing aspects of the Bill touch devolved competence, triggering legislative consent — Scottish LCM agreed (event 28822); Welsh and NI LCMs expected.
Key concepts
Continuation
The statutory mechanism in s.382 of the 2006 Act by which the Act is extended for up to one year by Order in Council, subject to a five-year ceiling that triggers a new Act.
Covenant Legal Duty (Part 16A 'due regard')
The statutory duty on specified public bodies to have due regard to the Armed Forces Covenant principles in housing, healthcare and education, currently set by the 2022 Regulations.
Defence Housing Service
New statutory body announced at Bill introduction to deliver service family accommodation and (per Lib Dem NC1) potentially single living accommodation.
Reserve recall
Power under the Reserve Forces Act 1996 (as amended) to call out former Service personnel and reservists for permanent service.
Service Justice System
The system of courts-martial, summary hearings and appeals governing personnel subject to service law under the 2006 Act.
Forward look calendar
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Re-committal of the Bill to a Committee of the whole House and Consideration / Third Reading under the 26 January 2026 Programme Order, taken in a single day.
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Government response to the Select Committee Special Report (HC 1712).
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Lords stages — Second Reading, Committee, Report, Third Reading.
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Royal Assent of the new Armed Forces Act before the 2006 Act's continuation expiry at end of 14 December 2026.
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Armed Forces Covenant Annual Report 2026 (15th statutory report) — the first against the expanded Legal Duty if the Bill receives Royal Assent in time.
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Legislative Consent Motions from the Welsh Senedd and Northern Ireland Assembly to follow the Scottish LCM already agreed.
Stakeholder positions
Ministry of Defence
Renew the 2006 Act on schedule, expand the Covenant Legal Duty in line with the Defence Committee's HC 572 recommendation, place the Defence Housing Service on statutory footing, and modernise reserve recall to expand the pool available in crises.Jun 2025Jan 2026Jan 2026Jan 2026
Tension with Mark Francois, Mike Martin
John Healey
Sponsoring Secretary of State; presents the Bill as the vehicle for the Government's Covenant pledge and the largest renewal of military housing in a generation, anchored in the 2024 and 2025 Covenant Annual Reports.Dec 2025Dec 2024
Lord Coaker
Lead Lords MoD minister; consistent line across HLWS1184 (2025 Covenant Annual Report), HLWS762 (Defence Reform) and HLWS748 (Covenant Legal Duty pledge) defending statutory expansion of the Covenant Duty.Dec 2025Jul 2025Jun 2025
Al Carns
Then Minister for Veterans and People; HCWS747 set out the formal Government pledge to expand the Covenant Legal Duty through the Bill in line with the Defence Committee report.Jun 2025
Defence Committee (House of Commons)
Recommended in HC 572 (April 2025) that the Covenant Legal Duty be extended to all Government departments and the devolved administrations, and that the Government develop an implementation strategy for consistent application across the UK — the policy basis the Bill adopts.Apr 2025Apr 2025Apr 2025Apr 2025Apr 2025
Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026
Special Report HC 1712 (28 April 2026) scrutinised the Bill with a primary focus on the extension of the Covenant Legal Duty; reported the Bill back to the House on 29-30 April 2026 to enable re-committal to a Committee of the whole House.Apr 2026Apr 2026
Mike Martin
On retention, housing and veterans welfare: pressing the Government to publish annual retention reports (NC4-NC5), apply Renters' Rights Act 2025 standards to single living accommodation (NC1), create a statutory Veterans' Mental Health Oversight Officer (NC2), and guarantee discharged personnel receive their medical records within one month (NC3).Apr 2026
Tension with Ministry of Defence
Ian Roome
On medical-discharge protections: co-led the Lib Dem amendments and tabled Amendment 1 exempting personnel medically discharged for physical or mental health reasons from being recalled to permanent service.Apr 2026
Mark Francois
On reserve forces, drones and ECHR: lead Conservative scrutineer pressing for higher reserve service age (Am. 20-21: 65→67), longer recall (Am. 22: 12→18 months), reserved-occupation exemptions (Am. 23), a National Veterans' Commissioner for England (NC6), a Forces Housing Association feasibility study (NC7), statutory rail concessions (NC8), a defence-drones authorisation regime (NC9-NC11, NC14) and reinstatement of an Article 15 derogation duty for overseas operations (NC13, NC15).Apr 2026
Tension with Ministry of Defence
David Reed
Co-signatory across the Conservative amendment package on reserve recall age, drone authorisation, ECHR derogation, protective orders and veterans support — consistent line with Mark Francois.Apr 2026
Sarah Bool
Co-signatory across the Conservative amendment package on reserve recall, drones, ECHR derogation and veterans support.Apr 2026
Dr Neil Shastri-Hurst
Co-signatory across the Conservative amendment package, with particular weight on protective orders for ex-service personnel (NC12) and ECHR-related amendments.Apr 2026
Engaged, but no published position in the corpus
- Louise Sandher-Jones —
- Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee (Lords) —
- Public Accounts Committee —
- Armed Forces Covenant Fund Trust —
- Council of Reserve Forces' and Cadets' Associations —
- Clive Efford —
- Director of Service Prosecutions —
- Armed Forces Commissioner —
- Ministry of Defence Police —