15 Things the US Army Looks for in a Background Check

A US Army soldier in uniform works on a computer at a desk with an American flag in the background

Joining the Army is more than proving you can run two miles and knock out push-ups. Before you ever set foot in basic training, youโ€™ll go through multiple layers of vetting – starting at your recruiterโ€™s desk and Military Entrance Processing Station (MEPS), and in some cases extending into a full national-security background investigation.

If your future role requires a clearance, youโ€™ll be monitored the entire time you serve.

Hereโ€™s a clear, practical guide to what gets checked, why it matters, and how the Army evaluates each area of risk.

How the Process Works


Before we get into specifics, it helps to picture the flow:

Step 1 โ€“ MEPS Screening

At MEPS, youโ€™ll confirm your identity, complete a medical exam, provide fingerprints, take a urinalysis, and go through basic legal eligibility checks.

Step 2 โ€“ Security Vetting (if needed)

For certain specialties, youโ€™ll complete a detailed security questionnaire (SF-86 or its digital replacement, the eApp). That starts a federal investigation under the 13 adjudicative guidelines used across the government.

Step 3 โ€“ Continuous Monitoring

If your job requires a clearance, your eligibility is never โ€œset and forget.โ€ The Defense Department uses automated record checks to detect new issues while youโ€™re in.

Quick Reference Table

Area Checked What They Look For Where It Happens What Youโ€™ll Do
Identity & Legal Presence Correct identity, citizenship or permanent residency Recruiter, MEPS Bring a valid ID and proof of status
Criminal History Arrests, charges, convictions, warrants Recruiter, MEPS, national checks Fingerprints; local police checks (DD 369)
Domestic Violence Prohibitions Convictions or orders banning firearm possession Recruiter, MEPS, unit Complete DD 2760; firearm bans may disqualify
Drugs & Alcohol Use, abuse, dependence, current use MEPS, later checks Urinalysis: disclose history honestly
Finances & Credit Heavy debt, defaults, unexplained affluence Security vetting Consent to credit pull; explain issues
Foreign Ties & Travel Dual citizenship, foreign contacts, relatives abroad Security vetting List contacts, travel, passports
Personal Conduct Honesty, candor, patterns of misconduct All stages Be truthful in all forms
Social Media (Public) Posts tied to risk factors Security vetting Public content can be reviewed
Education, Jobs, Addresses 10-year history Security vetting Provide dates, references, and supervisors
Medical & Mental Health Conditions affecting fitness MEPS Bring records; disclose history
Ongoing Monitoring New arrests, financial issues, security concerns Continuous vetting Keep records clean, report changes

1. Identity and Legal Presence

A US Army recruit speaks with a staff member while reviewing documents during an identity and legal presence check
The Army confirms your status using the DHS SAVE system

You must be a U.S. citizen or a lawful permanent resident with a valid Green Card to enlist. For officers, citizenship is required by commissioning. The Army verifies your status through DHSโ€™s SAVE system.

What It Means for You

Bring original, valid documents: birth certificate, passport, or Green Card. Errors or mismatches can slow your processing and trigger extra checks.

Audit your online presence with tools or services like Reputation Recharge to remove or address risky content.

2. Fingerprints and FBI Checks

At MEPS, youโ€™ll be fingerprinted using live-scan technology. Those prints go to the FBI for a nationwide check.

If you later hold a national-security position, the FBIโ€™s NGI Rap Back service can alert DoD to any new arrests.

What It Means for You

Expect this to be one of the first things you do at MEPS. Once youโ€™re in a monitored role, new incidents will be flagged automatically.

3. Local Police and Court Records: DD Form 369

A stack of DD Form 369 documents used by the US Army to request local police and court records
The Army checks every place youโ€™ve lived

Your recruiter will have you sign DD Form 369, which allows local police to share records about arrests or charges, even minor ones. If youโ€™ve lived in multiple places, expect to sign more than one.

What It Means for You

You canโ€™t โ€œhideโ€ an old ticket or juvenile matter. The Army is going to check every jurisdiction youโ€™ve called home.

4. Arrests, Charges, Convictions, and Waivers

The Army may grant waivers for certain offenses, but serious crimes and recent incidents are harder to clear. New charges during processing trigger a fresh review.

What It Means for You

Tell your recruiter about everything, even sealed or expunged records. They can assess waiver chances before you get deep into processing.

5. Domestic-Violence Prohibitions

A close-up of a clenched fist symbolizing the US Armyโ€™s prohibition on domestic violence in background checks
Since many Army jobs require weapons handling, this is often disqualifying

Under federal law (Lautenberg Amendment), anyone convicted of a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence or subject to certain restraining orders cannot possess firearms.

What It Means for You

If you fall under this restriction, your career options will be severely limited – sometimes to the point of ineligibility.

6. Drug Use History and Testing

Youโ€™ll take a urinalysis at MEPS. Any positive result or refusal is a permanent disqualifier.

For security roles, prior drug use is weighed under adjudicative guidelines, but honesty matters.

What It Means for You

Marijuana is still illegal under federal law for service members, regardless of state laws. Quit well before MEPS and disclose past use accurately.

7. Alcohol-Related Incidents

One DUI with evidence of rehabilitation may be explainable. Multiple incidents raise serious doubts about judgment and self-control.

What It Means for You

If youโ€™ve had alcohol-related trouble, bring records of counseling or treatment. Show a clear change in behavior.

8. Financial History and Credit

A calculator and pen on a financial statement for a US Army financial history and credit check
Be prepared to explain major financial changes with proof

Excessive debt, defaults, or large unexplained deposits can be red flags. The concern is vulnerability to coercion or corruption.

What It Means for You

Before your credit is pulled, resolve delinquencies where possible. Be ready to explain any major financial changes with documentation.

9. Foreign Ties, Travel, and Dual Citizenship

Investigators want to know about foreign relatives, dual passports, and extended overseas travel. The goal is to assess risk from foreign influence.

What It Means for You

Simply having a foreign family isnโ€™t a problem. Not disclosing it is.

10. Personal Conduct and Honesty

Every form and interview is a consistency check. False statements can be prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. 1001 and will destroy your credibility.

What It Means for You

If something changes – a new job, an address, a traffic ticket – update your recruiter and security forms right away.

11. Publicly Available Social Media

A person uses a smartphone in front of a laptop, representing public social media checks in the US Army background process
Review privacy settings and post carefully

Security investigators can review your public posts for signs of criminal activity, extremist associations, or other disqualifying behavior.

What It Means for You

Assume that anything public online could be reviewed. Adjust your privacy settings and think twice before posting.

12. Education, Employment, and Residence History

Youโ€™ll be asked for a 10-year history of where youโ€™ve lived, worked, and studied, plus contact info for supervisors and references.

What It Means for You

Gather your dates and names now – the form wonโ€™t let you leave gaps.

13. Medical and Mental Health Disclosures

MEPS checks for conditions that affect readiness. Many are waiverable if managed and documented.

What It Means for You

Bring copies of your medical records and be honest about your history. Hiding an issue is far more damaging than admitting one.

14. Jobs That Require a Security Clearance


If your MOS requires a clearance, the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency will investigate your background under the 13 National Security Adjudicative Guidelines. Each case is judged in context.

What It Means for You

There is no automatic โ€œyesโ€ or โ€œno.โ€ Time passed, rehabilitation, and honesty carry weight.

15. Continuous Vetting After You Join

Clearance holders are now subject to continuous monitoring instead of periodic reinvestigations. Automated systems flag arrests, credit changes, and other risk indicators.

What It Means for You

Keep your legal, financial, and personal life stable. Report issues immediately.

What Happens at MEPS

Expect a structured day:

  • Fingerprinting and ID check
  • Urinalysis and lab work
  • Medical exam under DoD standards
  • Pre-Enlistment Interview to verify all disclosures
  • If applicable, start the security clearance process

The 13 Adjudicative Guidelines

For clearance-required jobs, adjudicators consider:

  1. Allegiance to the U.S.
  2. Foreign Influence
  3. Foreign Preference
  4. Sexual Behavior
  5. Personal Conduct
  6. Financial Considerations
  7. Alcohol Consumption
  8. Drug Involvement and Substance Misuse
  9. Psychological Conditions
  10. Criminal Conduct
  11. Handling Protected Information
  12. Outside Activities
  13. Use of IT Systems

Practical Prep Checklist

 

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  • Gather all IDs, immigration docs, diplomas, addresses, job references, court records, and medical files.
  • Resolve or document financial issues.
  • Stop drug use well before processing.
  • Keep your story consistent across every form and interview.
  • Audit your public online presence.
  • Ask early about waiver eligibility if you have legal or medical history.

Final Words

The Armyโ€™s background check is about risk, trust, and readiness. You canโ€™t control every factor, but you can control your preparation, your honesty, and how you present your history.

The more complete and consistent your information, the smoother your path into service will be.