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🏛 Federal Hiring

Veterans Preference Complete Guide

5-point, 10-point, passover protections, and exactly how to claim every hiring advantage you earned by serving.

Navigate USAJOBS Correctly

Veterans preference is a legal right — not a courtesy. Federal law requires agencies to give hiring preference to eligible veterans in competitive service positions. Most veterans eligible for preference either don't use it or use it incorrectly. This guide explains exactly what preference is, who qualifies, how much it's worth, and how to make sure you get every point you're entitled to.

What Veterans Preference Actually Does

Veterans preference adds points to your score on the competitive civil service examination or rating system. It does not guarantee you a job. What it does: it moves you above equally-qualified non-veterans in the ranking, provides passover protections for 30%+ disabled veterans, and gives you rights to appeal if an agency passes over a preference-eligible veteran to hire a non-veteran.

The Two Types of Preference

5-Point Preference (TP)

Five points added to your passing score. Requires honorable or general discharge and at least one of: active duty during a declared war, active duty in a campaign or expedition for which a campaign badge was authorized, active duty during the period April 28, 1952 through July 1, 1955, or service on active duty for more than 180 consecutive days between February 1, 1955 and October 14, 1976. Most post-9/11 veterans with at least 181 days active service qualify for 5-point preference.

10-Point Preference (CP, CPS, XP)

Ten points added to your score, plus significantly stronger legal protections. Three qualifying conditions:

Where Preference Applies

Position TypePreference Applies?Notes
Competitive Service (GS positions)Yes — fullyMost federal positions. Full preference rights apply.
Excepted ServicePartiallyAgencies may use preference but not required to by law in all cases
Senior Executive Service (SES)NoPreference does not apply to SES positions
State and local governmentVariesMost states have their own preference laws — check your state
Private sectorNoFederal law does not require private employers to give preference

The Passover Protection (30%+ Disabled Veterans)

If you have a service-connected disability rating of 30% or more, agencies cannot pass you over to select a lower-ranked non-veteran without notifying you and getting approval from OPM. This is one of the strongest hiring protections in federal law. You must be on the certificate (referred list) for this protection to apply — meaning your application must have been rated and referred to the hiring manager.

How to Claim Your Preference

1
Identify your preference typeUse the criteria above. If you have any service-connected disability rating, you qualify for 10-point preference.
2
Gather documents5-point: DD-214 Member 4 copy. 10-point: DD-214 plus VA Benefits Summary Letter showing your disability rating and that it is service-connected.
3
Select preference in USAJOBS profileUnder "Eligibilities" in your USAJOBS profile. You must self-identify — agencies cannot apply preference without your claim.
4
Upload documents with every applicationUSAJOBS allows you to save documents to your profile and attach them to applications. Upload once, reuse for all applications.
5
Complete SF-15 if requiredSome agencies require Standard Form 15 (Application for 10-Point Veterans Preference) for 10-point claims. Download from opm.gov.

Veterans Preference in State Government

Every state has its own veterans preference law for state government jobs. Most follow a similar structure to federal preference but with different point values, qualifying criteria, and application processes. Check your state's Department of Human Resources or Veterans Affairs website for your state's specific preference rules. States with the strongest preference programs include Texas, Virginia, Florida, California, and New York.

Filing a Complaint

If you believe an agency violated your veterans preference rights — passed you over without notification, failed to add your preference points, or discriminated based on veteran status — you can file a complaint with the Office of Special Counsel (osc.gov) or the Merit Systems Protection Board (mspb.gov). The process is free and these agencies take veterans preference violations seriously.

Navigate Federal Hiring Correctly

Veterans preference is just one piece. The USAJOBS system has specific requirements that trip up most veterans. Read the full guide.

Read USAJOBS Guide