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ONE RANK ONE PENSION (OROP) SIMPLIFIED – 6 KEY FACTS YOU MUST KNOW

Today we will understand the important subject of One Rank One Pension (OROP) in simple words. This topic has been debated for more than five decades. Every ex-serviceman has heard about OROP, but very few know its full history — why it was demanded, what the government implemented, what the courts said, and where the matter stands today.

  1. Definition of OROP
  2. History of OROP
  3. The 2011 Koshiyari Committee Report
  4. Government’s Implementation Order of 07 Nov 2015
  5. Supreme Court Judgment of Mar 2022
  6. AFT Delhi Judgment of Jan 2025

At its core, OROP is very simple:

👉 Equal pension for equal rank with equal length of service, irrespective of date of retirement.

That means if two soldiers retire as Naik after 20 years of service, whether one retired in 1985 and the other in 2020, both should get the same pension.

So for most soldiers, pension is the only financial support for the next 30–40 years of life. Any gap in pension creates huge inequality and hardship.

Unfortunately, before 2014, pensions varied widely even for the same rank, depending on the date of retirement. That is why the demand for OROP became a matter of justice.

The story begins in 1973.

This was the starting point of injustice and the demand for OROP.

Over the next 40 years:

In 2011, a Parliamentary Committee on Defence, headed by Shri Bhagat Singh Koshiyari (MP, Uttarakhand), studied the matter in detail.

It gave its report on 19 Dec 2011, and this became a turning point.

The report added to the government’s responsibility while giving fresh hope to veterans.

Finally, after decades of protests, rallies, and hunger strikes by veterans at Jantar Mantar, Delhi, the government announced OROP on 07 Nov 2015, effective from 01 Jul 2014.

  1. Average Formula – Pension was fixed as the average of minimum and maximum pensions, instead of the top pension. Result: “One Rank, Many Pensions.”
  2. Five-Year Revision – Instead of automatic annual increase (like civilians get with each Pay Commission), OROP pensions were to be revised once every 5 years.
  3. Exclusion of Premature Retirees – Soldiers who took voluntary retirement (PMR) after long years of service were denied OROP.

The 2015 order was historic, but not the “true OROP” that veterans wanted.

ESM Corner-OROP

Veterans’ associations challenged the 2015 order in the Supreme Court.

This was a big setback for veterans.

On 31 Jan 2025, the Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT), Delhi gave a very important judgment.

However, like many such judgments, it is still pending with the government for implementation.

So friends, here is the reality in simple words:

Till then, let us stay aware, united, and healthy. Pension matters are complicated, but knowledge is power.

Jai Hind!

ALSO READ I 10 MUST-KNOW BENEFITS AND UPDATES FROM THE DIRECTORATE OF CANTEEN SERVICES IN 2025

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