In late March 2026, a claim spread that the U.S. Army had raised its maximum age for recruitment.
According to social media posts and news reports, this change was connected to the U.S.-Israel war with Iran, which began in late February. One post stated:
The recruitment window just got a lot wider the u.s. army is officially raising the maximum enlistment age for active duty from 34 to 42. with the "5-day pause" expiring on saturday and 3,000 paratroopers from the 82nd airborne already heading to the middle east, the pentagon is looking for "life experience" to fill the ranks before this transition from an air war to a potential ground campaign.
Some of the posts also mentioned an alleged change to the Army's rules easing the enlistment process for candidates with a past marijuana conviction.
An official update to Army Regulation 601-210,
The army spokesperson told Snopes, "The Army simply codified in regulation a policy that was first issued in 2023. The Army regulation is in compliance with the Department of War's policy and Title 10 USC," referring to the part of the federal United States Code that governs the military. A regulation is a legally binding rule.
Some of the "expedited revisions" to the enlistment program included:
Increases the maximum enlistment age up to and including age 42 for non-prior service applicants
Increases the maximum enlistment age up to and including age 42 for applicants with prior military service.
Eliminates requirement of a waiver for a single conviction of possession of marijuana or a single conviction of possession of drug paraphernalia
In a phone conversation, the spokesperson denied that the change to the age limit was a new policy: "This is not new."
Congress previously raised the age cut-off for enlisting in the Army to 42 in a law codified in 2006. The spokesperson told us, "The army went down to 35
The age limit increase was not reflected on the U.S. Army
The March 2026 regulation also eased the Army's restrictions for people with marijuana convictions, per reports. An Army spokesperson told us that on April 20 the Army was changing the waiver approval process for recruits with one prior conviction.
The Army spokesperson said, "Also, assessment for waivers of all pre-accession legal offenses will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis. The Army does not condone or authorize the use of illegal substances among our formation."
Per reporting from The New York Times, the military struggled to reach its recruitment goals in the years 2022, 2023 and 2024. However, it reported significantly higher numbers in 2025. The Army spokesperson told us, "The Army has excelled in meeting recruiting goals for fiscal year 2026 and is on track to accomplish the following year's goal."
The changing recruitment regulations likely have less to do with the Iran war, according to experts, and more to do with the Army facing flagging recruitment numbers in an aging population and needing to expand its hiring pool and to accommodate applicants with experience in cybersecurity, logistics and other areas.
Snopes has previously reported on the claim that U.S. soldiers were refusing deployment orders to Iran.
