TDY (Temporary Duty): The Ultimate Guide to Government & Military Travel

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney or your agency's travel administration office. Always consult with your authorizing official or a legal expert for guidance on your specific travel situation. The regulations discussed, such as the joint_travel_regulations, are complex and subject to change.

Imagine your boss asks you to travel to another city for a week to attend a critical conference. Your company would pay for your flight, your hotel, and give you a daily allowance for food. You'd go, do your job, and return home to your normal life. TDY, or Temporary Duty, is the U.S. government and military's version of that business trip. It's an official assignment at a location other than your permanent duty station, with the key expectation that you will return once the mission is complete. However, unlike a typical corporate trip, TDY is governed by a massive set of rules that can feel like a labyrinth. These regulations, primarily the joint_travel_regulations for the military and the federal_travel_regulation for civilians, dictate everything: how you can travel, where you can stay, how much you get for meals, and what receipts you must obsessively keep. Understanding these rules isn't just about following procedure; it's about ensuring you are properly and fully compensated for the expenses you incur while serving the public interest away from home. This guide is your map through that labyrinth.

  • Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:
  • Temporary, Not Permanent: A TDY is an assignment at a different location for a specified period, after which you are expected to return to your permanent post; it is fundamentally different from a permanent_change_of_station (PCS).
  • An Entitlement, Not a Bonus: The money you receive on TDY for lodging, meals, and incidental expenses (known as per_diem) is a reimbursement designed to cover costs, not extra salary or a bonus.
  • Authorization is Everything: No travel or expense is reimbursable on a TDY assignment unless it is approved beforehand on your official travel orders or authorization; you cannot “wing it” and hope to get paid back.

The Story of TDY: A Regulatory Journey

The concept of government-funded travel is as old as the nation itself. However, the modern framework for TDY evolved significantly in the 20th century, driven by the need for a standardized, fair system to manage the travel of a massive federal workforce and a global military. Before World War II, travel rules were often inconsistent and agency-specific. The explosion of the federal government during the war and the subsequent Cold War necessitated a more uniform approach. The goal was to prevent fraud, ensure fairness, and control costs. This led to the creation of centralized regulations. For the Department of Defense (DoD), this effort culminated in the Joint Federal Travel Regulations (JFTR) for uniformed members and the Joint Travel Regulations (JTR) for civilians. In 2012, these were combined and streamlined into a single, comprehensive joint_travel_regulations (JTR) that now governs all DoD personnel. For most other civilian federal agencies, the guiding document is the federal_travel_regulation (FTR), managed by the general_services_administration (GSA). While the JTR and FTR share the same core principles, they have key differences in implementation and specific allowances, reflecting the distinct needs of the military versus the civilian workforce. The entire system is built on the legal principle that government employees should neither personally profit from nor be financially harmed by official travel.

The “law” of TDY isn't a single statute passed by Congress but a detailed set of administrative regulations with the force of law. These are the two bibles of government travel:

  • The Joint Travel Regulations (JTR): This is the authoritative document for all members of the Uniformed Services and DoD civilian employees. The JTR is incredibly detailed, with chapters covering every conceivable aspect of travel, from determining your official duty station to calculating M&IE (Meals and Incidental Expenses). A key provision states: “A traveler is expected to exercise the same care in incurring expenses that a prudent person would exercise if traveling on personal business.” This “prudent person” concept is the philosophical core of all TDY expense rules.
  • The Federal Travel Regulation (FTR): Issued by the general_services_administration, the FTR governs travel for federal employees of most civilian agencies (e.g., Department of State, EPA, Department of Commerce). It establishes the government-wide policy for subsistence allowances, transportation, and reimbursements. The FTR often gives individual agencies more discretion to set their own internal policies, as long as they stay within the FTR's framework.

While the principles are similar, the specific rules for a TDY can vary significantly depending on who you work for. An Army Major on TDY to a training exercise will have different lodging options and reporting requirements than a State Department diplomat attending a summit.

Aspect Department of Defense (JTR) Department of State (FTR/DSSR) Federal Bureau of Investigation (FTR/DOJ Policy) NASA (FTR/NASA Policy)
Primary Regulation joint_travel_regulations FTR & department_of_state_standardized_regulations (DSSR) FTR & Department of Justice supplemental regulations FTR & NASA Procedural Requirements (NPR)
Travel System Defense Travel System (dts) is mandatory for most. E2 Solutions or agency-specific system. Agency-specific system. SAP-based Concur Government Edition (CGE).
Lodging Rules Must use government lodging or DoD-preferred commercial hotels if available (FedRooms). Non-use requires a specific justification. Emphasis on safe and secure lodging, especially OCONUS. Pre-approval of high-cost lodging is common. Strict adherence to GSA per diem lodging rates. Justification for exceeding rates is highly scrutinized. Travelers encouraged to use FedRooms program to find FTR-compliant lodging.
Special Allowances Can include hardship duty pay, hazardous duty pay, or special per diem for specific operational environments. Can include Post Hardship Differential and Danger Pay for certain overseas assignments, governed by the DSSR. Availability of law enforcement-specific allowances for operational travel. Fewer unique allowances; primarily adheres to standard GSA per diem.

What this means for you: Never assume the rules your friend in another agency follows will apply to you. Your travel orders and your agency's specific implementation of the JTR or FTR are the only authoritative sources.

A TDY assignment is more than just a trip; it's a package of interconnected entitlements and responsibilities. Understanding these components is critical to a smooth and stress-free experience.

Element: The Travel Authorization (Orders)

This is the single most important document. It is the legal instrument that initiates the TDY. It functions as the contract between you and the government. If it's not on your orders, you can't do it, and you won't get paid for it.

  • What it includes: Your name, destination(s), duration of the TDY, the purpose of the trip, the accounting line of credit to fund the travel, and, most importantly, authorized expenses.
  • Key things to check:
  • Rental Car: Is it explicitly authorized? If not, you cannot rent one and expect reimbursement.
  • Excess Baggage: Are you authorized extra bags for official equipment?
  • Special transportation: Is a taxi or ride-sharing service to/from the airport approved?
  • Real-life example: An Air Force Captain receives TDY orders to attend a conference in San Diego. The orders state, “Rental car is not authorized. Use of public transportation is directed.” The Captain decides a rental car would be more convenient and gets one anyway. Upon return, the claim for the rental car is denied, and the Captain has to pay the $400 bill out of pocket. The orders are paramount.

Element: Per Diem

This is the most talked-about part of TDY. Per_diem is Latin for “per day.” It is a daily allowance for lodging, meals, and incidental expenses. It is not profit. The general_services_administration (GSA) sets per diem rates for locations within the Continental U.S. (CONUS), while the Department of Defense sets them for overseas locations (OCONUS). The Per Diem rate for any given location is broken into two main parts:

  • Lodging: This is the maximum amount you can be reimbursed for your hotel room per night, excluding taxes. You are only reimbursed for the actual cost up to this ceiling. If the lodging rate is $150 and you find a compliant hotel for $120, you are reimbursed $120. You don't get to keep the difference.
  • M&IE (Meals and Incidental Expenses): This is a fixed daily rate to cover the cost of food, tips, laundry, and other small expenses. You do not need to provide receipts for M&IE. You receive this full daily rate (adjusted for the first and last day of travel, which are typically paid at 75%).

Hypothetical Example: A civilian employee from the EPA is on TDY to Denver, CO.

  • The GSA per diem lodging rate for Denver is $170/night.
  • The M&IE rate is $74/day.
  • She finds a hotel for $160/night.
  • For a full day of TDY, she will be reimbursed her actual lodging cost ($160) plus the full M&IE rate ($74), for a total of $234.

Element: Transportation

This covers how you get from your home station to the TDY location and back.

  • Air Travel: You are typically required to use a government-contracted airline (the “City Pair Program”) and book through your agency's travel system (like dts). The ticket is usually paid for directly by the government using a Centrally Billed Account (CBA).
  • Privately Owned Vehicle (POV): You may be authorized to drive your own car. If so, you will be reimbursed on a per-mile basis at a rate set by the GSA. The government will compare the cost of driving (mileage, plus per diem for travel days) to the cost of flying. You will be reimbursed the lesser of the two amounts, a process known as a “constructed travel worksheet.”
  • Rental Car: As mentioned, this must be explicitly authorized on your orders. It is typically approved only when it is more advantageous to the government than using taxis or other transportation at the TDY location.

You've just been told you're going on TDY. Don't panic. Follow a methodical process to ensure you're prepared and protected.

Step 1: Review Your Travel Authorization (Orders)

As soon as you receive your draft orders, scrutinize them. Do the dates match your understanding? Is the location correct? Most importantly, are all anticipated expenses authorized? If you know you'll need a rental car to get from your hotel to the remote training site, but it's not on your orders, address it now. It's much easier to amend orders before you travel than to fight for reimbursement after the fact.

Step 2: Book Travel Through Official Channels

Do not go to a commercial travel website. You must use your agency's designated Travel Management Center (TMC) or online booking tool, like the Defense Travel System (dts).

  • Flights: The system will typically only show you flights that comply with the fly_america_act and City Pair contracts.
  • Lodging: Use the system to find FedRooms-approved hotels that are at or below the per diem rate. If you have to book outside the system, get approval first. If no compliant lodging is available, you will need to get a “Non-Availability” or “Justification” letter to be reimbursed for a more expensive hotel.
  • Rental Car: Book the authorized vehicle class (usually compact or economy) through the system to get government rates.

Step 3: During the TDY - The Three "R"s

  • Be Reasonable: Remember the “prudent person” rule. Don't order the most expensive item on the menu just because you're on M&IE. While you don't need food receipts, you may need to justify other expenses.
  • Keep Records: The golden rule of TDY is “If it's over $75, get a receipt.” This applies to things like parking, tolls, official-use printing, etc. For lodging, you need a receipt regardless of cost. Take a picture of every receipt with your phone the moment you get it.
  • Report Itinerary Changes: If your mission changes and you need to stay longer or leave earlier, notify your authorizing official immediately. Your orders must be amended to reflect the change, or your reimbursements could be denied.

Step 4: Filing Your Travel Voucher (The Claim)

This is your claim for reimbursement. It is a legal document, and you sign it certifying that your claims are true and accurate under penalty of the false_claims_act.

  • Timeliness: You are generally required to file your voucher within 5 business days of returning from TDY.
  • Accuracy: Go through your trip day by day. Upload all your receipts (lodging, rental car, gas for rental, parking, etc.). Accurately report the times you departed and arrived.
  • Review: Double-check everything before you sign and submit. A simple mistake can delay your reimbursement for weeks.
  • Travel Authorization/Orders (e.g., DD Form 1610): The foundational document authorizing your entire trip. You should have a digital and physical copy with you at all times.
  • Travel Voucher/Sub-voucher (e.g., dd_form_1351_2): This is the “Travel Claim/Expense Report” you will fill out upon your return. It's where you list all your expenses and certify their accuracy to get reimbursed.
  • Receipts: Specifically, the itemized lodging receipt is the most critical. It must show a daily breakdown of the room charge and a zero balance, proving you paid it.

While not Supreme Court cases, certain administrative decisions from bodies like the Government Accountability Office (GAO) and its predecessor, the Comptroller General, have profoundly shaped TDY regulations.

  • Backstory: For many years, travelers were reimbursed based on a flat, fixed per diem rate regardless of their actual costs. This led to situations where travelers in high-cost cities were financially burdened, while those in low-cost areas could potentially profit.
  • The Legal Question: Should reimbursement be based on a fixed allowance or the actual, reasonable costs incurred by the traveler?
  • The Decision: Through a series of decisions and regulatory updates, the government moved to the “actual subsistence” system we have today. This means for lodging, you are reimbursed for what you actually and reasonably spend, up to a set maximum. This was a landmark shift toward a more equitable system.
  • Impact Today: This is why you must submit a lodging receipt. The government reimburses your actual cost, not the maximum allowed rate, preventing windfalls and ensuring taxpayer money is spent responsibly.
  • Backstory: A recurring issue was determining a traveler's official “home base.” Can an employee who teleworks full-time from a home in Virginia claim their agency's headquarters in Washington, D.C. as a TDY location?
  • The Legal Question: What legally constitutes an employee's PDS, especially in an era of remote work?
  • The Decisions: The GAO and federal courts have consistently held that the PDS is the location where the employee regularly performs their duties. For a full-time remote worker, their home (or an approved alternative worksite) is their PDS.
  • Impact Today: If you are a remote employee, you cannot claim per diem for traveling to your agency's main office building for a meeting. That trip is considered a commute to your regular place of duty, not a TDY. This has massive implications for the future of federal remote work.

The COVID-19 pandemic dramatically accelerated the trend of remote work within the federal government. This has created new and complex TDY challenges.

  • The Remote Work Dilemma: As established in the case study above, an employee's home can be their official PDS. This means a trip to the central office is not a TDY, creating a potential disincentive for agencies to hire remote workers who may need to travel frequently for in-person collaboration. Debates are ongoing about creating more flexible regulations to accommodate a modern, distributed workforce.
  • Budgetary Pressures: Government travel is often one of the first areas scrutinized during budget cuts. This leads to increased pressure to justify every trip, stricter enforcement of rules, and a greater reliance on virtual meetings. Expect requirements to prove a TDY is “mission-essential” to become even more stringent.
  • The Sharing Economy: The rise of services like Airbnb and Uber has challenged traditional travel regulations. While some agencies have started to create policies allowing their use, issues of safety, insurance, and compliance with fee structures remain complex. Future versions of the JTR and FTR will need to provide much clearer guidance on this.
  • Travel System Modernization: Systems like DTS are notoriously complex and often frustrating for users. The DoD and other agencies are investing in next-generation travel systems that promise to be more intuitive, mobile-friendly, and use AI to automatically flag potential errors on vouchers, streamlining the entire process from authorization to reimbursement.
  • Data Analytics: Expect agencies to use data analytics to scrutinize travel patterns. They can identify outliers—travelers who consistently book hotels at the maximum per diem rate or whose rental car costs are higher than average—to target for audits. This data-driven oversight will increase the need for meticulous record-keeping by all travelers.
  • CONUS: Continental United States.
  • DTS: Defense Travel System; the primary tool for DoD travel authorization and vouchers.
  • Federal_Travel_Regulation: (FTR) The main set of rules governing travel for most civilian federal employees.
  • GSA: General Services Administration; the agency that manages federal property and sets per diem rates for the CONUS.
  • Joint_Travel_Regulations: (JTR) The bible of travel regulations for all DoD personnel, both military and civilian.
  • M&IE: Meals and Incidental Expenses; the portion of per diem that covers food and small costs.
  • OCONUS: Outside the Continental United States.
  • PCS: Permanent Change of Station; a permanent move to a new duty station, distinct from a TDY.
  • Per_Diem: A daily allowance for lodging, meals, and incidental expenses during official travel.
  • Permanent_Duty_Station: (PDS) Your official “home base” where you are assigned.
  • POV: Privately Owned Vehicle; your personal car.
  • TMC: Travel Management Center; the contracted travel agency for a government department.
  • Travel_Voucher: The official claim form you submit for reimbursement after a TDY is complete.