Summary and Key Points: The U.S. Army has ended a decades-old uniform distinction by requiring all drill sergeants to wear the same campaign hat, replacing the bush hat previously worn by women in the role.
-The change took effect January 2, 2026, and applies across active-duty and reserve formations. Army leaders say the move reflects a single standard for certification and service, while also addressing long-running manufacturing and quality-control problems tied to the bush hat.
-Surveys showed broad support among drill sergeants, with many favoring the campaign hat’s appearance and consistency. Officials describe the decision as administrative, not ideological, though it arrives during a wider push for stricter uniform standards.
Why the U.S. Army Replaced the Bush Hat for Female Drill Sergeants
The change, while modest in the grand scheme of things, reflects broader institutional changes under the Trump administration to simplify standards and address long-standing logistical problems that the service says have become increasingly difficult to ignore.
The effective date was January 2, 2026, and the Army’s decision applies to both active-duty and reserve drill sergeants across the force, with female drill sergeants currently serving authorized to draw campaign hats immediately ahead of the effective date.
“Every member of society understands the importance of the U.S. Army drill sergeant and the iconic headgear associated with the time-honored position as a symbol of excellence.”, 2024 U.S. Army DSOY Samuel Matlock said. “This single standard will eliminate any confusion among the training population, the American public, and cadre regarding all standards for serving as a drill sergeant.”
Why Now?
For more than 50 years, male and female drill sergeants have worn different headgear. Male drill sergeants have worn the flat-brimmed campaign hat since the establishment of the Drill Sergeant Program in 1964, while women assigned to the role have worn an upturned–brim bush hat that was modeled on Australian designs since 1972, when the Army first opened the program to women.
The Army now says that distinction is no longer necessary and impractical.

A U.S. Soldier, assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, XVIII Airborne Corps, prepares to throw a weighted medicine ball during a physical training session at Segra Stadium in Fayetteville, N.C., July 15, 2025. The full-body exercise was part of a circuit training rotation designed to boost strength and endurance. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Gianna Elle Sulger)
“There’s a single standard when screening and certifying Noncommissioned Officers (NCOs) for service as a drill sergeant, a single standard that we hold all serving drill sergeants to, and moving forward, there will be a single standard drill sergeant uniform,” Command Sgt. Maj. Michael McMurdy said about the decision.
The decision is interesting because drill sergeants occupy a highly visible – and unique – role within the Army, serving as the first point of contact for civilians entering military service and acting as enforcers of discipline and standards within Army culture during initial training.

(Sep 30, 2025) — Recruits perform Instructional Training Exercise (ITE) at U.S. Navy Recruit Training Command September 30, 2025. More than 40,000 recruits train annually at the Navy’s only boot camp. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Stuart Posada)
The campaign hat has become one of the most recognizable symbols of the profession, with its origins dating back to the 19th century.
According to the Army, more than 142,000 NCOs have served as drill sergeants since 1964, including more than 38,000 women who wore the bush hat during that period.
So far, the move seems to be popular. Internal Army surveys suggest broad support for the decision, with consolidated data collected since fiscal year 2023 showing that roughly 70 percent of surveyed drill sergeants favor switching from the bush hat to the campaign hat, while more than 60 percent believe the campaign hat conveys a more professional appearance.
Practical considerations also come into play: Army officials have acknowledged that manufacturers have struggled for years to produce bush hats that consistently meet service quality standards, with no industry partner currently willing to accept new contracts for their production.
A Welcomed Change for the U.S. Army
Senior NCOs who previously served in the role have also largely welcomed the move. Sgt. Maj. Melissa Solomon, who was named U.S. Army Reserve Drill Sergeant of the Year in 2010, said the bush hat once played an important symbolic role but that it had since become a liability.
Sgt. 1st Class Sarah Escarcega, the 2023 Maneuver Center of Excellence Drill Sergeant of the Year also shared a similar sentiment, arguing that maintaining separate headgear no longer aligned with how drill sergeants are evaluated or held to uniform standards.
The change is also intended to reduce confusion among trainees during the earliest stages of basic training – a concern that was cited by multiple drill sergeant leaders involved in the Army’s review process.
While the decision has attracted public attention amid debate over military culture and standards – particularly given the negative attention attracted by Trump’s appointment of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth – Army officials have stressed that the decision is more administrative than it is ideological.
That means that, if the circumstances were different, the hat would likely stay – and the Trump administration is not concerned about any perceived gender barrier or distinction that exists as a result of the separate uniforms.
An Army spokesman told Army Times that the change is unrelated to recent combat arms reviews or gender integration debates and was driven primarily by quality control issues and feedback from the force.
More Changes Coming
The announcement also comes amid a broader push from Defense Secretary Hegseth to tighten grooming and uniform regulations across the services.
In September 2025, Hegseth ordered new rules governing hairstyles, jewelry, fingernails, and facial hair, implementing a stricter focus on clean and standardized military appearance.
As the Army now implements the change, all drill sergeants will wear the same campaign hat for the first time, formally ending a gender-specific uniform separation that has existed for over half a century.
About the Author:
Jack Buckby is a British researcher and analyst specialising in defence and national security, based in New York. His work focuses on military capability, procurement, and strategic competition, producing and editing analysis for policy and defence audiences. He brings extensive editorial experience, with a career output spanning over 1,000 articles at 19FortyFive and National Security Journal, and has previously authored books and papers on extremism and deradicalisation.

K
February 16, 2026 at 12:11 pm
So, for someone not familiar with the different hats, photos might have been nice to include.
GuileMike
February 16, 2026 at 7:42 pm
Don’t worry, the bush hat will be back when a Democrat comes back into office. This is just a ploy with this administration to make everyone the same regardless of sex.
D
February 16, 2026 at 8:22 pm
The article is about changes in hats. Let’s go thru and count the picture of ANY kind of hats in this article.
Brian DA
February 17, 2026 at 7:11 am
You write a whole article about a hat that, unless you were in the Army, have no idea what that hat looks like. Then insert several photos of females in the Army, none of which are wearing that hat. As it was described as a liability, I’m going to imagine that it has several points, is multicolored with flashing lights on the tips of each point. That’s what this article taught me.
Jef byb
February 17, 2026 at 5:49 pm
Photos used were complete waste of space. Why didn’t you show the hat?!!!
Reo
February 18, 2026 at 5:38 am
A hat-less article about hats from some guy named Jack. Suffice it to say, “Jack knows jack-shit nuthin’ about picturing hats.” His bio lists him as a “researcher”. I am throwing in my hat on that one.
Terry Daniel Digenti
February 18, 2026 at 9:55 am
This veteran thinks that’s great! 👍 I would also love to see (not that it will happen) females not having buns but shorter hair. I’m not being sexist but think it would be cleaner looking.
Jim Thurman
February 18, 2026 at 4:57 pm
As a veteran of the United States Army, it is outstanding that a single piece of headgear that signifies excellence as a noncommission officer, training civilians to use that person wearing that headgear as the model for every soldier, to emulate. This removes the ambiguity and differentiation of the sexes it leads you to understand that the person wearing the campaign hat is definitively in charge no matter the gender or their race. Also, it is kind of strange that you stated it was the Secretary of Defense win his proper form of address is Secretary of War whether we like it or not.
Bob Aboey
February 22, 2026 at 11:49 am
Pics of the hats or it didn’t happen.
Henry Sherman
February 22, 2026 at 12:19 pm
@Jim Thurman. The correct title is still Secretary of Defense. There is no Department of War. Department of Defense is stautory and can only be changed by Congress. The E.O. signed by President Trump makes it ceremonial only. That is why all headers on Defense Department dociments still use Department of Defense and not Department of War, like the NDAA. President Trump signed an E.O., that does not restore the War Department. That allows the Executive Branch to to use the names, titles, and change signs as secondary or ceremonial. The Department of Defense can only be changed by amending the National Security Act of 1947 and the Title of Secretary of Defense can only be changed by Congress amending Title 10, that is for any cabinet level position. It’s also right in the E.O. President Trump signed that itself makes clear that statutory references to DOD/Secretary of Defense still control until changed by law. The Department of Defense and Secretary of Defense remain the statutory legal titles. There is no war department.