Austria Every male citizen of the
Republic of Austria from the age of 17 up to 50, specialists up to 65 years is liable to military service. However, besides mobilization, conscription calls to a six-month long basic military training in the can be done from the age of 18 up to age 34 at the latest. For men refusing to undergo this training, a nine-month lasting
community service is mandatory.
Belgium Conscription in
Belgium was suspended following a government decision in 1992 and ended in 1994. The last conscripts left active service in February 1995.
Bulgaria Bulgaria had conscription for males above 18 until it was ended in 2008. Due to a shortfall in the army of some 5,500 soldiers, parts of the former ruling coalition have expressed their support for the return of conscription, most notably
Krasimir Karakachanov. Opposition towards this idea from the main coalition partner,
GERB, saw a compromise in 2018, where instead of conscription, Bulgaria could have possibly introduced a voluntary military service by 2019 where young citizens can volunteer for a period of 6 to 9 months, receiving a basic wage. However, this has not gone forward.
Cambodia Since the signing of the Peace Accord in 1993, there has been no official conscription in
Cambodia. Also the National Assembly has repeatedly rejected to reintroduce it due to popular resentment. However, in November 2006, it was reintroduced. Although mandatory for all males between the ages of 18 and 30, less than 20% of those in the age group are recruited amidst a downsizing of the armed forces.
Canada Compulsory service in a sedentary militia was practiced in Canada as early as 1669. In peacetime, compulsory service was typically limited to attending an annual muster, although the
Canadian militia was mobilized for longer periods during wartime. Compulsory service in the sedentary militia continued until the early 1880s when Canada's sedentary Reserve Militia system fell into disuse. The legislative provision that formally made every male inhabitant aged 16 to 60 member of the Reserve Militia was removed in 1904, replaced with provisions that made them theoretically "liable to serve in the militia". Conscription into a full-time military service had only been instituted twice by the government of Canada, during both world wars. Conscription into the
Canadian Expeditionary Force was practiced in the last year of the First World War in 1918. During the Second World War, conscription for home defence was introduced in 1940 and for overseas service in 1944. Conscription has not been practiced in Canada since the end of the Second World War in 1945.
China soldier with his horse, China, 210–209 BC Universal
conscription in China dates back to the State of
Qin, which eventually became the Qin Empire of 221 BC. Following unification, historical records show that a total of 300,000 conscript soldiers and 500,000 conscript labourers constructed the
Great Wall of China. In the following dynasties, universal conscription was abolished and reintroduced on numerous occasions. , universal military conscription is theoretically mandatory in
China, and reinforced by law. However, due to the large population of China and large pool of candidates available for recruitment, the
People's Liberation Army has always had sufficient volunteers, so conscription has not been required in practice.
Cuba Cyprus Military service in Cyprus has a deep rooted history entangled with the
Cyprus problem. Military service in the
Cypriot National Guard is mandatory for all male citizens of the Republic of Cyprus, as well as any male non-citizens born of a parent of
Greek Cypriot descent, lasting from the 1 January of the year in which they turn 18 years of age to 31 December, of the year in which they turn 50. All male residents of Cyprus who are of military age (16 and over) are required to obtain an
exit visa from the
Ministry of Defense. Currently, military conscription in Cyprus lasts up to 14 months.
Denmark in Copenhagen Conscription is known in Denmark since the
Viking Age, where one man out of every 10 had to serve the king.
Frederick IV of Denmark changed the law in 1710 to every 4th man. The men were chosen by the landowner and it was seen as a penalty. Since 12 February 1849, every physically fit man must do military service. According to §81 in the
Constitution of Denmark, which was promulgated in 1849: Every male person able to carry arms shall be liable with his person to contribute to the defence of his country under such rules as are laid down by Statute.
— Constitution of DenmarkThe legislation about compulsory military service is articulated in the Danish Law of Conscription. National service takes 4–12 months. It is possible to postpone the duty when one is still in full-time education. Every male turning 18 will be drafted to the 'Day of Defence', where they will be introduced to the Danish military and their health will be tested. Physically unfit persons are not required to do military service. It is only compulsory for men, while women are free to choose to join the Danish army. Almost all of the men have been volunteers in recent years, 96.9% of the total number of recruits having been volunteers in the 2015 draft. After lottery, one can become a conscientious objector. Total objection (refusal from alternative civilian service) results in up to 4 months jailtime according to the law. However, in 2014 a Danish man, who signed up for the service and objected later, got only 14 days of home arrest.
Eritrea Estonia Estonia adopted a policy of
ajateenistus (literally "time service") in late 1991, having inherited the concept from
Soviet legislature. According to §124 of the
1992 constitution, "Estonian citizens have a duty to participate in national defence on the bases and pursuant to a procedure provided by a law", which in practice means that men aged 18–27 are subject to the draft. In the formative years, conscripts had to serve an 18-month term. An amendment passed in 1994 shortened this to 12 months. Further revisions in 2003 established an eleven-month term for draftees trained as NCOs and drivers, and an eight-month term for rank & file. Under the current system, the yearly draft is divided into three "waves" – separate batches of eleven-month conscripts start their service in January and July while those selected for an eight-month term are brought in on October. An estimated 3200 people go through conscript service every year. From 2013, women have been able to voluntarily join the conscription under the same conditions as men, the only difference being the norms of the general fitness tests and a 90-day window during which women can leave the service. Conscripts serve in all branches of the
Estonian Defence Forces except the
air force which only relies on paid professionals due to its highly technical nature and security concerns. Historically, draftees could also be assigned to the
border guard (before it switched to an all-volunteer model in 2000),
a special rapid response unit of the
police force (disbanded in 1997) or three militarized rescue companies within the
Estonian Rescue Board (disbanded in 2004).
Finland at the end of their basic training period Conscription in Finland is part of a general compulsion for
national military service for all adult males (; ) defined in the 127§ of the
Constitution of Finland. Conscription can take the form of military or of civilian service. According to 2021 data, 65% of Finnish males entered and finished the military service. The number of female volunteers to annually enter armed service had stabilised at approximately 300. The service period is 165, 255 or 347 days for the rank and file conscripts and 347 days for conscripts trained as
NCOs or reserve officers. The length of civilian service is always twelve months. Those electing to serve unarmed in duties where unarmed service is possible serve either nine or twelve months, depending on their training. Any Finnish male citizen who refuses to perform both military and civilian service faces a penalty of 173 days in prison, minus any served days. Such sentences are usually served fully in prison, with no
parole. Jehovah's Witnesses are no longer exempted from service as of 27 February 2019. The inhabitants of demilitarized
Åland are exempt from military service. By the Conscription Act of 1951, they are, however, required to serve a time at a local institution, like the coast guard. However, until such service has been arranged, they are freed from service obligation. The non-military service of Åland has not been arranged since the introduction of the act, and there are no plans to institute it. The inhabitants of Åland can also volunteer for military service on the mainland. As of 1995, women
are permitted to serve on a voluntary basis and pursue careers in the military after their initial voluntary military service. The military service takes place in
Finnish Defence Forces or in the
Finnish Border Guard. All services of the Finnish Defence Forces train conscripts. However, the Border Guard trains conscripts only in land-based units, not in coast guard detachments or in the Border Guard Air Wing. Civilian service may take place in the Civilian Service Center in
Lapinjärvi or in an accepted non-profit organization of educational, social or medical nature.
France Germany Between 1956 and 2011 conscription was mandatory for all male citizens in the German
federal armed forces (), as well as for the
Federal Border Guard () in the 1970s (see
Border Guard Service). With the end of the
Cold War the
German government drastically reduced the size of its armed forces. The low demand for conscripts led to the suspension of compulsory conscription in 2011. Since then, only volunteer professionals serve in the . In 2025, Germany began steps towards potentially reintroducing conscription, which had been suspended in 2011. The new policy included compulsory questionnaires for 18-year-old men. Extending the conscription system to women, which is discussed, would require a constitutional change. The government aimes to raise troop numbers to meet NATO commitments, including plans for an additional 100,000 personnel by 2029. However, Defense Minister Boris Pistorius explained that, for the time being, mandatory conscription would not return "in the immediate future."
Greece of the Presidential Guard in front of the
Greek Parliament armed with M1 Garands Since 1914
Greece has been enforcing mandatory
military service, currently lasting 12 months (but historically up to 36 months) for all adult men. Citizens discharged from active service are normally placed in the reserve and are subject to periodic recalls of 1–10 days at irregular intervals. Universal conscription was introduced in Greece during the military reforms of 1909, although various forms of selective conscription had been in place earlier. In more recent years, conscription was associated with the state of general mobilisation declared on 20 July 1974, due to the crisis in
Cyprus (the mobilisation was formally ended on 18 December 2002). The duration of military service has historically ranged between 9 and 36 months depending on various factors either particular to the conscript or the political situation in the Eastern Mediterranean. Although women are employed by the Greek army as officers and soldiers, they are not obliged to enlist. Soldiers receive no health insurance, but they are provided with medical support during their army service, including hospitalization costs.
Greece enforces conscription for all male citizens aged between 19 and 45. In August 2009, duration of the mandatory service was reduced from 12 months as it was before to 9 months for the army, but remained at 12 months for the navy and the air force. The number of conscripts allocated to the latter two has been greatly reduced aiming at full professionalization. Nevertheless, mandatory military service at the army was once again raised to 12 months in March 2021, unless served in units in Evros or the North Aegean islands where duration was kept at 9 months. Although full professionalization is under consideration, severe financial difficulties and mismanagement, including delays and reduced rates in the hiring of professional soldiers, as well as widespread abuse of the deferment process, has resulted in the postponement of such a plan.
Iran In
Iran, all men who reach the age of 18 must do about two years of compulsory military service in the
IR police department or
Iranian army or
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Before the
1979 revolution, women could serve in the military. However, after the establishment of the Islamic Republic, some Ayatollahs considered women's military service to be disrespectful to women by the
Pahlavi government and banned women's military service in Iran. Therefore, Iranian women and girls were completely exempted from military service, which caused Iranian men and boys to oppose. In Iran, men who refuse to go to military service are deprived of their citizenship rights, such as employment,
health insurance, continuing their education at university, finding a job, going abroad, opening a bank account, etc. Iranian men have so far opposed mandatory military service and demanded that military service in Iran become a job like in other countries, but the Islamic Republic is opposed to this demand. so they treat it with caution. In Iran, usually wealthy people are exempted from conscription. Some other men can be exempted from conscription due to their fathers serving in the
Iran-Iraq war.
Israel There is a mandatory military service for all men and women in
Israel who are fit and 18 years old. Men must serve 32 months while women serve 24 months, with the vast majority of conscripts being Jewish. Some Israeli citizens are exempt from mandatory service: • Non-Jewish Arab citizens • Permanent residents (non-civilian) such as the
Druze of the Golan Heights • Male Ultra-Orthodox Jews can apply for deferment to study in
Yeshiva and the deferment tends to become an exemption, although some do opt to serve in the military • Female religious Jews, as long as they declare they are unable to serve due to religious grounds. Most of whom opt for the alternative of volunteering in the national service
Sherut Leumi All of the exempt above are eligible to volunteer to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), as long as they declare so. Male
Druze and male
Circassian Israeli citizens are liable for conscription, in accordance with agreement set by their community leaders (their community leaders however signed a clause in which all female Druze and female Circassian are exempt from service). A few male
Bedouin Israeli citizens choose to enlist to the Israeli military in every draft (despite their Muslim-Arab background that exempt them from conscription).
Lithuania Lithuania abolished its conscription in 2008. In May 2015, the Lithuanian parliament voted to reintroduce conscription and the conscripts started their training in August 2015. From 2015 to 2017 there were enough volunteers to avoid drafting civilians.
Luxembourg Luxembourg practiced military conscription from 1948 until 1967.
Moldova Moldova has a 12-month conscription for all males between 18 and 27 years. However, a citizen who completed a military training course at a
military department is exempted from conscription.
Netherlands Conscription, which was called "Service Duty" () in the
Netherlands, was first employed in 1810 by French occupying forces.
Napoleon's brother
Louis Bonaparte, who was
King of Holland from 1806 to 1810, had tried to introduce conscription a few years earlier, unsuccessfully. Every man aged 20 years or older had to enlist. By means of drawing lots it was decided who had to undertake service in the French army. It was possible to arrange a substitute against payment. Later on, conscription was used for all men over the age of 18. Postponement was possible, due to study, for example. Conscientious objectors could perform an alternative civilian service instead of military service. For various reasons, this forced military service was criticized at the end of the twentieth century. Since the Cold War was over, so was the direct threat of a war. Instead, the Dutch army was employed in more and more peacekeeping operations. The complexity and danger of these missions made the use of conscripts controversial. Furthermore, the conscription system was thought to be unfair as only men were drafted. In the European part of Netherlands, compulsory attendance has been officially suspended since 1 May 1997. Between 1991 and 1996, the Dutch armed forces phased out their conscript personnel and converted to an all-professional force. The last conscript troops were inducted in 1995, and demobilized in 1996. citizen aged 17 gets a letter in which they are told that they have been registered but do not have to present themselves for service.
Norway Conscription was constitutionally established the 12 April 1907 with
Kongeriket Norges Grunnlov § 119.. ,
Norway currently employs a weak form of mandatory military service for men and women. In practice recruits are not forced to serve, instead only those who are motivated are selected. About 60,000 Norwegians are available for conscription every year, but only 8,000 to 10,000 are conscripted. Since 1985, women have been able to enlist for voluntary service as regular recruits. On 14 June 2013 the
Norwegian Parliament voted to extend conscription to women, resulting in universal conscription in effect from 2015. In earlier times, up until at least the early 2000s, all men aged 19–44 were subject to mandatory service, with good reasons required to avoid becoming drafted. There is a right of
conscientious objection. As of 2020 Norway did not reach gender
equity in conscription with only 33% of all conscripted being women. In addition to the military service, the Norwegian government draft a total of 8,000 men and women between 18 and 55 to non-military
Civil defence duty. (Not to be confused with
Alternative civilian service.) Former service in the military does not exclude anyone from later being drafted to the Civil defence, but an upper limit of total 19 months of service applies. Neglecting mobilisation orders to training exercises and actual incidents, may impose fines.
Russia The
Russian Armed Forces draw personnel from various sources. In addition to
conscripts, the
2022 Russian mobilization following the
invasion of Ukraine included
Russian irregular units in Ukraine and
Russian penal military units as sources of manpower. The country's armed forces are further supplemented by Russia's
combat reserve force, the
National Guard of Russia, and
Russian volunteer battalions.
Serbia ,
Serbia no longer practises mandatory military service. Prior to this, mandatory military service lasted 6 months for men.
Conscientious objectors could however opt for 9 months of
civil service instead. On 15 December 2010, the
Parliament of Serbia voted to suspend mandatory military service. The decision fully came into force on 1 January 2011. In September 2024, Prime Minister
Miloš Vučević announced that conscription will return in September 2025 with the mandatory military service lasting 75 days. Civil service will still be possible as an alternative.
Singapore South Africa There was mandatory military conscription for all white men in South Africa from 1968 until the end of
apartheid in 1994. Under South African defense law, young white men had to undergo two years' continuous military training after they leave school, after which they had to serve 720 days in occasional military duty over the next 12 years.
South Korea Sweden Sweden had conscription () for men between 1901 and 2010. During the last few decades it was selective. Since 1980, women have been allowed to sign up by choice, and, if passing the tests, do military training together with male conscripts. Since 1989 women have been allowed to serve in all military positions and units, including combat.
Turkey The Conscription Law of the
Ottoman Empire was introduced just before the
WW1 and has stayed in force with
Turkey as well. Conscription applies to all
male citizens from 21 to 41 years of age. It can be served either; 6-months unpaid as a
private, 12-month paid as an
officer or
NCO (dependent on the level of education) and as a one-month service in exchange of a certain fee which also applies to the citizens who live abroad. Turks with
multiple citizenship are exempt from conscription if they have already served in the armed forces of another country. Women and
LGBT citizens are not drafted but can enlist as officers or NCOs on-demand.
United Kingdom The
United Kingdom introduced conscription to full-time military service for the first time in January 1916 (the eighteenth month of
World War I) and abolished it in 1920.
Ireland, then part of the United Kingdom, was exempted from the original 1916 military service legislation, and although further legislation in 1918 gave power for an extension of conscription to Ireland, the power was never put into effect. Conscription was reintroduced in 1939, in the lead up to
World War II, and continued in force until 1963.
Northern Ireland was exempted from conscription legislation throughout the whole period. In all, eight million men were conscripted during both World Wars, as well as several hundred thousand younger single women. The introduction of conscription in May 1939, before the war began, was partly due to pressure from the French, who emphasized the need for a large British army to oppose the Germans. From early 1942 unmarried women age 20–30 were conscripted (unmarried women who had dependent children aged 14 or younger, including those who had illegitimate children or were widows with children were excluded). Most women who were conscripted were sent to the factories, but they could volunteer for the
Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) and other women's services. Some women served in the
Women's Land Army: initially volunteers but later conscription was introduced. However, women who were already working in a skilled job considered helpful to the war effort, such as a
General Post Office telephonist, were told to continue working as before. None was assigned to combat roles unless she volunteered. By 1943 women were liable to some form of directed labour up to age 51. During the Second World War, 1.4 million British men volunteered for service and 3.2 million were conscripted. Conscripts comprised 50% of the
Royal Air Force, 60% of the
Royal Navy and 80% of the
British Army.
United States Conscription in the
United States officially ended in 1973, but males aged between 18 and 25 are required to register with the
Selective Service System to faciliate a reintroduction of conscription should Congress deem it necessary.
President Gerald Ford had suspended mandatory draft registration in 1975, but President
Jimmy Carter reinstated the requirement when the
Soviet Union intervened in Afghanistan five years later. Ever since, Selective Service registration has been required of almost all young men in the United States. There have been no prosecutions for violations of the draft registration law since 1986. Males between the ages of 17 and 45, and female members of the
U.S. National Guard, may be conscripted for federal militia service pursuant to 10 U.S. Code § 246 and the
Militia Clauses of the
United States Constitution. In February 2019, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas ruled that male-only conscription registration breached the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause. In
National Coalition for Men v. Selective Service System, a case brought by the nonprofit men's rights organization the
National Coalition for Men against the U.S. Selective Service System, Judge
Gray H. Miller issued a declaratory judgment that the male-only registration requirement is unconstitutional. However, he did not specify what action the government should take. That ruling was reversed by the Fifth Circuit court of appeals, and in 2021 the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the decision by the Fifth Circuit.
Other countries •
Conscription in Australia •
Conscription in Egypt •
Conscription in France •
Conscription in Malaysia •
Conscription in Mexico •
Conscription in Myanmar •
Conscription in New Zealand •
Conscription in North Korea •
Conscription in Russia •
Conscription in Singapore •
Conscription in South Korea •
Conscription in Switzerland •
Conscription in Turkey •
Conscription in Ukraine •
Conscription in the Ottoman Empire •
Conscription in the Russian Empire •
Conscription in Vietnam •
Conscription in Georgia •
Conscription in Mozambique ==See also==