The clock is already ticking, and almost no one is talking about it. A quiet change in the Selective Service System could decide whether an 18-year-old keeps access to college aid, careers, and key benefits—or loses them without even realizing why. Parents assume it’s automatic. Teens assume it doesn’t matter. Both assumptions can destro… Continues…
Right now, the rules are brutally simple: if you’re a man in the U.S. approaching 18, you’re probably still expected to register yourself—and on time. The new automated system is coming, but it isn’t fully here yet, and the government won’t fix a missed registration years later when you’re applying for federal aid, a government job, or a professional license. That’s when the doors quietly close, and “I thought it was automatic” doesn’t reopen them.
For families already buried in FAFSA forms, applications, and deadlines, Selective Service can feel like just one more box. But this box is different: it’s tied to opportunity.
The safest move in this transition period is painfully unglamorous—go to official sources, verify registration, save proof, and don’t rely on rumors about 2026. A few minutes of certainty now can protect choices your future self will desperately care about. READ MORE BELOW