The MEPS physical examination is one of the most comprehensive medical screenings most people will ever go through. Military Entrance Processing Stations (MEPS) process hundreds of thousands of applicants every year, and the physical is designed to ensure that recruits can safely withstand military training and the demands of their assigned occupational specialty. Understanding what the MEPS physical actually involves β and what standards you need to meet β helps you walk in prepared rather than anxious.
The depth perception test at MEPS is one component of a much larger vision and physical assessment. This guide covers the full physical examination sequence, vision standards including depth perception, what's tested in each component, and what actually disqualifies applicants.
The MEPS physical typically takes a full day β plan for 6β12 hours at the station. The processing sequence varies slightly by MEPS location, but generally follows this structure:
The order may differ, and additional testing may be required based on your medical history or preliminary findings. Expect to wait between stations β bring patience. You won't be rushed through.
Vision is tested across multiple dimensions at MEPS. The standards differ by branch and by Military Occupational Specialty (MOS/AFSC/rating), so the threshold that qualifies you for one role may not qualify you for another.
Visual acuity is tested monocularly (each eye separately) using a standard eye chart. The general military standard requires vision correctable to 20/20 in each eye with glasses or contacts. Uncorrected vision requirements vary by role β most general service positions accept significant uncorrected vision if it's correctable to 20/20, but aviation roles have tighter standards for uncorrected acuity.
Color vision is tested using pseudoisochromatic plates (Ishihara plates or similar). Color deficiency is disqualifying for certain roles β combat arms occupations, aviation, and other specialties that depend on color discrimination are often closed to applicants with color vision deficiency. However, many support and administrative roles remain available even with color deficiency. The specific occupations affected depend on branch and role.
The depth perception test at MEPS is typically a stereopsis (3D vision) test. The most common instrument is the Verhoeff stereopter or a similar device that presents visual stimuli at different depth planes, requiring the examinee to identify which element appears closest or farthest.
Depth perception testing assesses binocular vision β the ability to judge relative distances in three dimensions. Good depth perception requires both eyes to work together effectively. People with significant differences in vision between eyes (anisometropia) or with certain forms of amblyopia (lazy eye) may have reduced stereopsis even if each eye individually tests well.
Depth perception standards at MEPS vary by role. Aviation candidates, for example, face stricter stereopsis requirements than infantry or administrative candidates. If you have any reason to believe your depth perception may be affected β prior surgery, significant refractive difference between eyes, or a history of lazy eye β it's worth getting an optometric evaluation before your MEPS appointment.
There's no preparation that improves depth perception for the test itself β it's a sensory measurement, not a trained skill. But knowing the test exists and what it involves prevents surprise.
Hearing is tested with a standard pure tone audiometry test. You'll sit in a sound booth wearing headphones and indicate when you hear tones at various frequencies and volumes. Results are measured as hearing threshold levels across specific frequencies (500 Hz, 1000 Hz, 2000 Hz, 3000 Hz, 4000 Hz, and 6000 Hz).
Military hearing standards use the H-profile classification:
Significant hearing loss at certain frequencies can disqualify an applicant or restrict available occupational specialties. If you have a known hearing condition, discuss it with your recruiter before MEPS β many conditions are waiverable depending on degree and role requirements.
Blood is drawn at MEPS for a comprehensive panel that includes:
Urinalysis tests for drug metabolites, kidney function, and medical conditions. The drug screen tests for the SAMHSA standard panel (THC, cocaine, opiates, amphetamines, PCP). A confirmed positive on the drug screen is disqualifying, with very limited waiver options.
Fasting is not required for MEPS blood draw in most cases, but avoid heavy alcohol in the days before β liver function tests can show abnormal values with recent heavy drinking.
The orthopedic exam tests range of motion, joint function, and musculoskeletal integrity. You'll perform a standardized duck walk, toe touch, squat, lunge, and upper body movement sequence. Examiners are looking for limitations in mobility, evidence of old injuries, and any conditions that would affect physical performance under military training demands.
Common orthopedic disqualifiers include:
If you have a prior orthopedic injury, make sure your medical records are available. MEPS physicians will review documentation of old injuries. An injury that is fully healed and doesn't limit function is generally not disqualifying.
Before seeing the physician, you'll complete a detailed medical history form (DD Form 2807-1). This form asks about every significant medical condition, diagnosis, surgery, or treatment you've ever had. Answering accurately is both a legal obligation and a practical necessity β MEPS physicians may ask follow-up questions and request documentation, and the background investigation process for military service will access medical records.
Conditions that are commonly disclosed and commonly waivedinclude:
Do not omit conditions from the medical history. Concealing a disqualifying condition is a federal crime (fraudulent enlistment) and has resulted in criminal prosecution. If you're unsure whether a condition disqualifies you, discuss it with your recruiter first β many conditions are waiverable with proper documentation.
After all screening tests, a MEPS physician reviews your results and conducts a hands-on examination. They'll review any flagged items from the medical history, assess the results of your laboratory tests, and make a final determination of physical qualification status.
The physician assigns a PULHES profile β a six-factor physical fitness assessment:
A rating of 1 in each category is fully qualified. Ratings of 2, 3, or 4 indicate increasing limitations. Most enlistment requires a minimum profile of 111111 or better, though some specialties have higher requirements in specific factors.
There's no cramming for a physical, but there are things that genuinely improve your outcome:
For the full timeline of what to expect on MEPS day, including wait times and processing order, that guide covers it hour by hour. The Baltimore MEPS, Dallas MEPS, Fort Jackson MEPS, and Jacksonville MEPS guides cover location-specific logistics if you're processing at one of those stations.