Knoxville MEPS: Location, Hours, and What to Expect

Everything about Knoxville MEPS — address, hours, what to bring, medical testing, and how to prepare for your military entrance processing day.

Knoxville MEPS: Location, Hours, and What to Expect

What Is Knoxville MEPS?

The Knoxville Military Entrance Processing Station (MEPS) is where military applicants from East Tennessee complete their official pre-enlistment processing. Before you can take the oath of enlistment and ship out to basic training, you'll spend a full day — sometimes two — at MEPS, going through medical exams, aptitude testing, and legal paperwork.

Knoxville MEPS serves recruits from across the region, processing applicants for all five military branches: Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard. Whether you're enlisting for active duty, reserves, or the National Guard, your path runs through this station.

Knoxville MEPS Location and Contact Information

The Knoxville MEPS is located at:

9047 Executive Park Drive, Suite 200
Knoxville, TN 37923

The station is in the Executive Park area of West Knoxville, accessible from I-40. Your military recruiter will provide specific transportation instructions — many applicants travel from their recruiting office in a government vehicle the evening before their MEPS appointment.

Knoxville MEPS Hours

MEPS processing typically begins early. Most stations — Knoxville included — start their day at 5:30–6:00 AM. Applicants usually arrive the night before and stay at a contracted hotel nearby, at no cost to them.

Plan for a full day. Processing can run 8–12 hours depending on the number of applicants, the complexity of your medical history, and whether you need additional testing. Bring patience — and something to keep you occupied during waiting periods.

What Happens at Knoxville MEPS

MEPS isn't a single event — it's a series of stations you move through over the course of the day. Here's the general flow:

ASVAB Testing (if not already complete)

If you haven't already taken the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery at a recruiting office, you'll take it at MEPS. Most applicants complete the ASVAB beforehand — but some take it on-site. The test takes approximately 3 hours and covers nine subject areas including math, science, and verbal skills.

Your ASVAB scores determine your military job eligibility (MOS, rating, or AFSC depending on branch). Higher scores open more job options. If you haven't taken the test yet, it's worth serious preparation before you arrive.

Medical Examination

The medical portion is usually the most time-consuming part of your MEPS day. A licensed physician conducts a comprehensive physical that includes:

  • Height, weight, and body composition measurements
  • Vision and hearing tests
  • Blood pressure and heart rate checks
  • Blood draw and urinalysis (drug screening)
  • Orthopedic evaluation — range of motion, strength, prior injuries
  • Mental health screening
  • Review of your complete medical history

Be honest about your medical history. Concealing conditions is a federal offense — and undisclosed conditions discovered later can result in discharge. If you have a documented medical condition, your recruiter can often obtain a medical waiver before your MEPS appointment.

Job Selection and Contracts

If you pass the medical exam, you'll meet with a military counselor (sometimes called a "classifier") to review your ASVAB scores, discuss available jobs, and sign your enlistment contract. This is when you choose your Military Occupational Specialty or rating.

Know what jobs you're interested in before MEPS. You don't have to decide on the spot, but having preferences ready speeds the process and gives you better options before high-demand slots fill up.

Oath of Enlistment

After contracts are signed, you'll take the Oath of Enlistment — either as a formal enlistment or a provisional oath if you're shipping to training later. This is a brief ceremony, but a meaningful one. Family members can sometimes observe; ask your recruiter about the policy at Knoxville MEPS.

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What to Bring to Knoxville MEPS

  • Government-issued photo ID (driver's license or passport)
  • Social Security card (original)
  • Birth certificate (certified copy)
  • Eyeglasses or contacts (if applicable) — bring your prescription
  • Any medical records, surgical records, or documentation of prior injuries
  • High school diploma or transcripts (or GED documentation)
  • Comfortable, loose-fitting clothing for the physical exam
  • Patience — processing takes most of the day

How to Prepare for Your MEPS Day

First-timers often feel anxious about what MEPS is and what to expect. The best preparation is straightforward: be honest, be rested, and know the rules.

Get good sleep before your appointment. You'll likely be up by 5 AM. The hotel stay the night before helps — use it. Fatigue affects test performance and makes the long day harder.

Don't exercise intensely the day before. Heavy workouts can temporarily elevate certain medical markers (blood pressure, heart rate, protein in urine). A light walk is fine. Leave the intense training for after MEPS.

Eat normally. Don't skip meals. Some applicants mistakenly fast before the blood draw — that's not required and just makes you feel worse. Eat a normal dinner and breakfast.

Don't use any substances. This includes marijuana (even in states where it's legal), and any prescription medications not disclosed to your recruiter. The urine screen catches what you'd expect.

Disclose everything. Medical waivers exist for many conditions — asthma, prior surgeries, ADHD, corrected vision problems. Work with your recruiter to get waivers in place before MEPS. Hiding conditions rarely works and always creates bigger problems later.

Common Reasons for MEPS Disqualification

Most disqualifications are medical. The most common ones:

  • Weight standards — each branch has specific height-weight requirements; failing them on your MEPS date disqualifies you from shipping, not permanently
  • Vision — uncorrected distance vision requirements vary by branch and job; many conditions can be corrected with glasses/contacts and qualify for a waiver
  • Prior surgeries or injuries — especially knees, shoulders, and back; documentation of successful recovery often supports a waiver
  • Mental health history — certain diagnoses (depression, ADHD, anxiety) may require waivers; the bar varies significantly by branch
  • Drug use — marijuana shows up for 30+ days in some cases; other drugs shorter. The test is standard urinalysis.

A disqualification isn't always permanent. Your recruiter can guide you on waiver options. Some applicants return to MEPS after addressing the underlying issue.

MEPS vs. the ASVAB: Understanding the Difference

Many applicants confuse the two. MEPS military processing is the full processing station — it handles the physical, job counseling, and enlistment oath. The ASVAB is just the aptitude test, which can be taken at a recruiting office or at MEPS itself.

Your ASVAB score — specifically the AFQT (Armed Forces Qualification Test) sub-score — determines basic eligibility. Branch minimums vary: Army requires a 31, Navy a 35, Marines a 32, Air Force a 36, and Coast Guard a 40. Job qualifications within each branch have their own requirements on top of that.

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Staying at the MEPS Hotel

Most applicants who live more than a reasonable commuting distance from Knoxville MEPS will stay at a contracted hotel the night before their appointment, fully covered by the military. Your recruiter arranges this.

There are rules at the hotel. You're expected to be in your room by a specific time (usually 10 PM), no alcohol, no visitors. These aren't suggestions — violating hotel rules can get your MEPS appointment cancelled and create a permanent record issue with your recruiting file.

Use the hotel stay to review any documents you need to bring, get to bed early, and mentally prepare for the next day. Some applicants try to cram ASVAB prep the night before — that's not the best approach. By that point, either you know it or you don't.

After MEPS: What Comes Next

Once you've completed processing and signed your contract, one of two things happens:

You ship immediately (DEP-to-active). Some applicants go directly to basic training from MEPS. Your recruiter and the MEPS counselor will discuss your ship date during job selection.

You enter the Delayed Entry Program (DEP). Most applicants join DEP — a period between enlistment and shipping to training that can range from a few weeks to a year. During DEP, you remain a civilian but are technically in the military's reserve pool. You'll have periodic check-ins with your recruiter.

Either way, MEPS is the gateway. Once you've taken the oath, the process is real and your commitment is legal.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.

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