Standard uniforms Service dress The current U.S. Air Force Service Dress Uniform, which was initially adopted in 1994 and made mandatory on 1 October 1999, consists of a three-button coat with silver-colored buttons featuring a design known as "Hap Arnold wings" (which replaced the previous design that utilized the Department of the Air Force crest), matching trousers (women may choose to wear a matching skirt), and either a
peaked service cap or
flight cap, all in Shade 1620, also known as "Air Force Blue". This is worn with a light blue (Shade 1550) shirt (for men) or blouse (for women) and a necktie (for men) or neck tab (for women) in shade 1620. Silver mirror-finish "U.S." pins are worn on the lapels. Enlisted "U.S." lapel pins have circles around them, while officers' pins do not. Officers' coats also have epaulets (shoulder straps), which are not present on enlisted members' coats. Enlisted personnel wear cloth rank insignia on both sleeves of the jacket and shirt, while officers wear metal rank insignia pinned onto the shoulder straps of the coat, and Air Force Blue slide-on loops ("soft rank" shoulder insignia) on the straps of the shirt. Officers also wear a band of dark blue cloth sleeve braid loops 3 inches from the cuffs of the sleeves of the coat. General officers wear a 1½ inch wide braid while officers in the rank of colonel and below wear a ½ inch wide braid. While the full "Class A" configuration of the service dress uniform includes the coat, for daily duty, particularly in warm weather climates, USAF personnel will typically wear the light blue shirt or blouse as an outer garment, with or without a tie or neck tab, with applicable rank insignia, speciality badges and a blue plastic name tag (ribbons are optional). A variety of alternate outer garments are also authorized for this uniform combination such as blue pullover sweater, blue cardigan sweater, lightweight blue jacket, or brown leather
A-2 flight jacket (flight jacket wear is limited to aeronautically rated officers, enlisted aircrew, and officer and enlisted missile operations personnel only).
Mess dress The
Mess dress uniform is worn to formal or semi-formal occasions such as
dinings-in and dinings-out, the annual Air Force Ball, weddings and other formal functions where civilian "
black tie" would be prescribed. The current mess dress uniform in use since the early/mid-1980s consists of a dark blue mess jacket and mess dress trousers for males and a similar color evening-length skirt for females; as of August 2020, females have the option to wear mess dress trousers. The jacket features ornate silver buttons, and is worn with the service member's awarded medals in miniature size, wings in miniature size, or other specialty insignia over the left breast, command insignia over the right breast for colonels and below (if applicable), satin air force blue bow-tie for males or tab for females, and a satin air force blue cummerbund. Cufflinks can be either shined or flat round silver or have the air force star and wing emblem. Dark blue suspenders may also be worn, but remain hidden while the jacket is on. Commissioned officers, USAFA and AFROTC cadets, and OTS officer trainees wear hard shoulder boards similar to those worn by commissioned officers of the
U.S. Navy. Commissioned officer shoulder boards for colonels and below feature an officer's rank insignia in raised metallic thread, bordered by two silver vertical metallic stripes similar to sleeve braid. General officers wear shoulder boards covered nearly the entire length and width in a silver metallic braid, with silver stars in a raised metallic thread in number appropriate to their rank. Enlisted personnel typically wear the same large rank insignia that they would wear on their service dress coats. Officers also wear a single silver metallic sleeve braid on the lower sleeves of the Mess Dress coat, with sleeve braid coming in two widths, in a 1/2 inch width for colonel and below, and in a 3/4 inch width for Brigadier General and above. Enlisted personnel normally wear no sleeve braid. No hat or nametag is worn with the Air Force Mess Dress Uniform. Pilots, navigators/combat systems officers, air crews,
remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) crews, and missile crews continue to wear olive green or desert tan one-piece
flight suits, or the two-piece OCP pattern flight suit. All three are made of
Nomex for fire protection when performing or in direct support of flying or missile duties, or when otherwise prescribed. The one piece flight suits are required for any aircrew position in which ejection seats are used. Aircrew not in an ejection seat and ground based crews, like RPA and missile crews, may wear either the two or one piece flight suits. The black leather boots and sage or green suede boots previously worn were discontinued with the phase out of the BDU and ABU respectively. All personnel now wear the coyote brown suede boots with all combat uniforms authorized.
Physical Training Gear The Air Force Physical Training Gear (PTG), first released on 1 October 2006 as Air Force Physical Training Uniform (AFPTU), consists of shorts, short-sleeve and long-sleeve T-shirts, jackets, and pants. The shorts are AF blue with a silver reflective Air Force logo on the wearer's front left and reflective stripes on the sides. The T-shirts are light grey with moisture-wicking fabric with a reflective Air Force logo on the upper left portion of the chest and the words "AIR FORCE" across the back. The jacket is blue with white piping and a reflective vertical line along the back. The pants are blue with silver reflective stripes on the lower legs. At one point, the jacket and pants were redesigned with a lighter, quieter material that didn't make noise with movement.
Distinctive uniforms U.S. Air Force uniform regulations authorize personnel assigned to
public duties and some other units to wear "distinctive uniforms," a similar concept to the "
special ceremonial units" identified in U.S. Army uniform regulations.
Band uniforms Personnel assigned to the
United States Air Force Band, the
United States Air Force Academy Band, and regional bands of the U.S. Air Force wear the ceremonial band tunic: a blue coat with a
standing collar, silver piping on the shoulder straps and front opening, and silver braid on the sleeve cuffs, worn with trousers with silver braid on the outer leg. As with other United States military bands, drum-majors may replace the blue
peaked hat with a bearskin helmet, and add a
baldric with campaign ribbons.
Command uniforms The Air Force Chief of Staff and the Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force are authorized to wear a special ceremonial uniform consisting of a stand-collar coat and braided trousers similar to the ceremonial band uniform, with the addition of a silver braid trimmed belt. Each uniform costs $700 with the wearer required to personally pay for purchase. This uniform was worn on 10 August 2012 at the ceremony in which Gen. Mark Welsh III succeeded Gen. Norton Schwartz as the 20th Air Force Chief of Staff, but was not used for the subsequent ceremonies of Gen. David L. Goldfein and General Charles Q. Brown.
Equestrian uniform The U.S. Air Force "Equestrian Competition Service Dress Configuration" is a special uniform authorized for wear during formal
dressage events sponsored by the
United States Equestrian Federation. The equestrian uniform is similar to service dress, but features white riding breeches in lieu of blue trousers. Black gloves, a black helmet, and black riding boots with silver spurs are also worn.
Honor guards The U.S. Air Force Drill Team, a special demonstration performance unit, as well as base honor guards, and the USAF marching unit, wear the distinctive honor guard uniform. Modeled on the service uniform, the honor guard uniform adds a silver-braided belt, silver
aiguillette, white cotton gloves, and white ascot. Large medals are worn in lieu of ribbons. "Ceremonial headgear" consists of a blue peaked hat with polished black visor.
Informal uniform Bandsmen, recruiters, chaplains, and fitness center staff are permitted to wear the Air Force "informal uniform" while on duty. This civilian
business casual–style dress consists of an Air Force blue
polo shirt with embroidered emblem, khaki trousers, and solid black low quarter or athletic shoes.
Cadet uniforms Prospective commissioned officers in a pre-commissioning status, for example, U.S. Air Force Academy cadets wear slide-on cadet or officer trainee "soft rank" insignia on their shirts and hard "shoulder boards" (similar to commissioned officer mess dress shoulder board insignia) on their service dress coats, again with cadet or officer trainee rank insignia. College and university AFROTC cadets and OTS officer trainees will also wear the soft ranks on their shirts, but will also wear on the service coat. The hard ranks are only worn on the Mess Dress uniform for ROTC or OTS cadets. The typical headgear for all is a
flight cap with medium density silver metallic thread piping and the prop & wings insignia for cadets who successfully complete recognition (USAFA), Field Training (ROTC), or the first half of OTS in place of the traditional officer insignia.
High school Air Force Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (AFJROTC) cadets wear the Air Force enlisted service dress uniform with an Air Force Junior ROTC patch and unit patch sewn onto the sleeves of the coat and shirt. Cadet officers and cadet enlisted both wear pin-on metal ranks on the lapels of their coats. Cadet officers wear slide-on soft ranks on the epaulets of their shirts while cadet enlisted wear pin-on metal ranks on the collar of their shirts. All Junior ROTC cadets wear the same flight caps as Air Force enlisted personnel with no thread piping, and cadet officers just wear an officer version of the AFJROTC insignia on their flight caps to distinguish themselves from cadet enlisted. Cadets at the
United States Air Force Academy are also authorized a unique, institutionally-authorized parade dress uniform consisting of blue-grey
shell jackets worn with a white belt (gold or platinum waist sash for seniors), white trousers, and white peaked hats. The cadet parade uniform was designed by Hollywood film director
Cecil B. DeMille, who received the
Secretary of Defense Exceptional Civilian Service Award for his work on the academy's uniforms. The cadet parade dress uniform was modified beginning with the graduation of the class of 2020. First class (senior) cadets commissioning into the Space Force wear a platinum sash instead of the gold sash during their graduations.
Special uniform situations Campaign hats As with the U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps, drill instructors in the U.S. Air Force—known as Military Training Instructors—are authorized to wear a
campaign hat. The Air Force campaign hat is navy blue and features the
Great Seal of the United States within a silver ring.
Highland dress In 1950, US Air Force (USAF) General S. D. "Rosie" Grubbs began organizing an Air Force Pipe Band, as part of the USAF Drum and Bugle Corps. The
United States Air Force Pipe Band was organized as an independent band in 1960 under Colonel George Howard. Standardized wear of
Highland dress, including
sporran and Mitchell Tartan
kilt, in honor of General William "Billy" Mitchell, was authorized by General Curtis LeMay. The pipe band was disbanded in early 1970, but wear of the official Active Duty Mitchell tartan (also known as the Hunter, Galbraith, Russell, or Milwaukee County) has been used since by U.S. Air Force Heritage Band Celtic Ensembles. In 1961 the US Air Force Reserve (USAFR) organized a pipe band, due in part to the popularity of the USAF Pipe Band. The modern U.S. Air Force Reserve tartan was authorized and approved in 2001; however, the previously used "Lady Jane" tartan was adopted from the Strathmore Woollen Company in 1987. The Band of the Air Force Reserve Pipe Band, wears
highland dress, including
kilt and
sporran. The band of the United States Air Force Reserve had one of the last U.S. military service pipe bands and closed down in 2013 due to sequestration. One piper is assigned to the United States Air Force Band in DC and a few other pipers still perform at official ceremonies across the Air Force. Following Hawaii's admission as a
U.S. state, the
Hawaii Air National Guard created a ceremonial
Royal Guard unit in 1963 to honor and inspire its
Native Hawaiian members, modeled after King David Kalākaua’s personal guard. The uniform of the Royal Guard is based on the 1885 dark blue service dress tunic and a white spiked cork
pith helmet introduced for the funeral procession for
Queen Emma. They are currently one of the only units in the U.S. military authorized to wear a pith helmet. ==See also==