“Fat generals” and overweight “chair-borne Rangers” are a bad look for the U.S. military, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth says the Pentagon doesn’t want them anymore. That was the blunt, but not new, message from Hegseth to America’s senior officers during a televised meeting that brought every active duty general and admiral together in a single location.
The unusual gathering sparked speculation about its purpose, with some analysts suggesting it might involve loyalty pledges or war planning. Instead, Hegseth unveiled his vision for reshaping the Pentagon around the so-called “warrior ethos.” Beards, bulging waistlines and relaxed standards will no longer be tolerated.
“Frankly, it’s tiring to look out at combat formations or really any formation and see fat troops,” Hegseth said. “Likewise, it’s completely unacceptable to see generals and admirals in the halls of the Pentagon and leading commands around the country in the world. It’s a bad look. It is bad. And it’s not who we are.”
Standardizing height, weight and fitness across the services
Each branch of the military currently maintains its own entry standards. Generally, recruits need to be at least 4’10” and no taller than 6’8”. Weight requirements vary, but most branches enforce a body fat cap of 26% for men and 36% for women, with the Marine Corps applying stricter rules.
With Hegseth’s announcement, those differences are coming to an end. Moving forward, all services will adopt one gender-neutral standard, based on existing male benchmarks. How exemptions will be handled is unclear. Currently, the Army and Navy allow service members to exceed body fat limits if they post high scores on their physical fitness tests. The Army also exempts officers over 60 from its annual test, though they must still maintain weight requirements and a doctor-approved fitness plan.
It’s unclear as of publish time how medical waivers will be handled, but the overall direction is clear: a single, stricter bar for all troops and leaders.
The fitness tests
Each service administers its own physical assessment. The Army Combat Fitness Test is among the most demanding, including a three-rep deadlift, a standing power throw, pushups, a sprint-drag-carry evaluation, a plank, and a two-mile run — all to be completed in under 50 minutes. An average soldier passes by deadlifting about 220 pounds, throwing a 10-pound ball 25 feet, completing 35 pushups, sprinting through the drag-and-carry course in about two minutes, holding a plank for three minutes and running two miles in 16 minutes.
Other branches require variations of pushups, pullups, planks and timed runs, with the Coast Guard adding water survival tests and the Air Force allowing alternate cardio options, like cycling. The Marine Corps maintains both a physical fitness test and a combat fitness test, with the latter including an 880-yard sprint, ammo can lifts, and a grueling obstacle course simulating battle conditions.
Planks replaced situps across most services, reflecting updated views on core strength.
Combat jobs and gender-neutral standards
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According to a 2023 study, about 70% of service members in the U.S. military are overweight or obese.

Hegseth made clear his changes will extend beyond basic training to every military specialty. Elite combat units, like Navy SEALs and Army Special Forces, already maintain gender-neutral requirements. Now, that principle will apply universally.
“We very much value the impact of female troops,” Hegseth said. “Our female officers and NCOs are the absolute best in the world. But when it comes to any job that requires physical power to perform in combat, those physical standards must be high and gender neutral. If women can make it excellent, if not, it is what it is. If that means no women qualify for some combat jobs, so be it.”
Bye-bye, Beardos
The new directive doesn’t stop at waistlines. Hegseth also declared there would be no more “beardos” at the Pentagon, as an unprofessional appearance would not be tolerated. He declared, “The era of rampant and ridiculous shaving profiles is done.” Hegseth said if a service member cannot meet the “male level, physical standards for combat positions and cannot pass a PT test or don’t want to shave and look professional — it’s time for a new position or a new profession.”
Broader context and reactions
The gathering at Quantico, Virginia, was described as unprecedented by analysts. Some initially believed Hegseth might emphasize loyalty to President Donald Trump, given tensions in civil-military relations. Instead, his focus was physical readiness, though the politics of military culture remain a backdrop.
The services themselves have been experimenting with fitness rules in recent years. The Navy, for example, updated its Fitness Enhancement Program in 2025 to exempt sailors from body composition checks if they scored high enough on their physical readiness test. Other branches have gradually loosened policies to improve retention. Hegseth’s new policy marks a reversal: tightening, not easing, requirements.
What this shift will mean in practice remains to be seen. Service members are awaiting clarification on exemptions, adjustments for older troops and how the new gender-neutral rules will affect retention and recruitment.
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