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Armed Forces Bill

Lifecycle: Implementation Defence Committee · Ministry of Defence · Public Accounts Committee Last regenerated 1 month, 3 weeks ago · 22 new events since

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

Statutory basis

Operationalising

Implementation

Scrutiny

Evidence

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 1

  • Ministry of Defence → src
    Sponsoring department; published the Bill, Explanatory Notes, ECHR and Delegated Powers Memoranda, impact assessments and the memorandum to the Select Committee.

Sponsoring minister 4

  • John Healey → src
    Secretary of State for Defence and Bill sponsor; laid the 2024 and 2025 Covenant Annual Reports and delivers the statutory Covenant duty under HCWS1181.
  • Lord Coaker → src
    Minister of State, Ministry of Defence (Lords); lead Lords minister on Defence Reform (HLWS762), the 2024 Covenant Annual Report (HLWS332) and the 2025 Covenant Annual Report (HLWS1184).
  • Al Carns → src
    Then Minister for Veterans and People when HCWS747 was issued (30 June 2025) pledging to expand the Covenant Legal Duty through the Bill; current status unknown, treat as historical.
  • Louise Sandher-Jones → src
    Then Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Defence with the Veterans and People portfolio when HCWS1078 announced the new Director of Service Prosecutions (20 November 2025); current status unknown, treat as historical.

Lead committee 4

  • Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026 → src
    Ad hoc Commons Select Committee that took oral evidence in March-April 2026 and reported on the Bill on 28-29 April 2026; chaired by Clive Efford.
  • Defence Committee (House of Commons) → src
    Departmental select committee; its 4th Report (HC 572) on the Covenant called for extension of the Legal Duty to all Government departments and the devolved administrations — the policy basis for Clause 2.
  • Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee (Lords) → src
    Lords scrutiny committee that has reported on the Armed Forces Commissioner Bill (17th and 26th Reports) and has historically scrutinised Armed Forces Bills (7th Report, 2021).
  • Public Accounts Committee → src
    Took evidence from MoD and the Council of Reserve Forces' and Cadets' Associations in September 2025 on RFCA reform — relevant to Clause 37 RFCA provisions.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 2

  • Armed Forces Covenant Fund Trust → src
    Public body subject to the 2025 MoD Public Body Review; delivers covenant funding programmes that the expanded Legal Duty will reinforce.
  • Council of Reserve Forces' and Cadets' Associations → src
    Gave evidence to the Public Accounts Committee on RFCA governance in September 2025 — relevant to Clause 37.

Commentator 7

  • Mike Martin → src
    Liberal Democrat MP; lead signatory on amendments and new clauses on retention reporting (NC4, NC5), single living accommodation standards (NC1), a Veterans' Mental Health Oversight Officer (NC2), and a duty to provide medical records on discharge (NC3).
  • Ian Roome → src
    Liberal Democrat MP; co-signatory with Mike Martin on the retention, housing, mental health and medical-discharge amendment package; lead on Amendment 1 exempting medically-discharged personnel from recall.
  • Mark Francois → src
    Conservative MP; lead signatory on Opposition amendments to raise the reserve service age to 67 (Amendments 20-21), extend recall orders to 18 months (Am. 22), create reserved-occupation exemptions (Am. 23), increase reserve readiness (Am. 24), and a substantial set of new clauses on a National Vete
  • David Reed → src
    Conservative MP; co-signatory across the full Francois amendment package on reserve forces age, ECHR derogation, defence drones and veterans support.
  • Sarah Bool → src
    Conservative MP; co-signatory across the Francois package on reserve recall, drones, ECHR and veterans support.
  • Dr Neil Shastri-Hurst → src
    Conservative MP; co-signatory across the Francois package, with particular weight on the protective-orders new clause (NC12) and ECHR-related amendments.
  • Clive Efford → src
    Labour MP chairing the Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026 across all six Public Bill Committee sittings.

Regulator / delivery programme 3

  • Director of Service Prosecutions → src
    Statutory office under s.364 of the 2006 Act; new appointment announced via HCWS1078 on 20 November 2025 just before the Bill's introduction.
  • Armed Forces Commissioner → src
    New statutory office created by the Armed Forces Commissioner Act 2025; operationalised by SI 2026/24 and SI 2026/372; works alongside the Bill's service complaints architecture.
  • Ministry of Defence Police → src
    Statutory force whose vetting framework is regulated by SI 2026/428 (April 2026), the latest operationalising SI in this regime.

Political commitments

  • commitment King's Speech announcement Labour · 2026 · King's Speech announces Armed Forces Bill

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Pledge To Protect Armed Forces Community Through New Armed Forces Covenant Lega…

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · New Defence Housing Service to transform housing for forces families as Armed F…

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · New powers for Defence personnel to defeat drones following doubling of inciden…

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · Major boost to pool of skilled former military personnel called upon in crises …

    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

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).