How many people have Q Clearance? (2024)

The Q Clearance is the enigmatically-named security clearance created to allow access Restricted Data, the legal category for nuclear secrets in the United States (after which my book is named). It is issued by the the US Department of Energy, and requires a single-scope background investigation (originally by the FBI), with the same requirements as a Top Secret clearance, and keeping it requires being re-investigated every 5 years.

A Restricted Data stamp from a document from the 1940s. If you don’t have a Q Clearance, you’re not supposed to see things like this. Don’t worry, this one was declassified. Strictly speaking, they are supposed to cross the stamps out once they declassify them. But they didn’t always do that consistently. I photographed this one at the NARA Archives II facility. You can see more photos I’ve taken of secrecy stamps, if that sort of thing piques your interest.

So how many people currently have Q clearances? Someone asked me this a year ago and I realized that not only did I not know, but I didn’t really have a great way to even estimate it. So I did the natural thing and filed a Freedom of Information Act request to the Department of Energy and asked them.

And today, they got back to me with this simple table:

April 2018 – 87,113

April 2019 – 90,454

April 2020 – 98,103

April 2021 – 92,177

Which is somewhat interesting. First, I guess that’s more than I would have guessed, but again, I didn’t have a great place to start for guessing. I knew, from Dana Priest and William Arkin’sTop Secret America that a decade ago, 850,000 Americans had a Top Secret clearance — a remarkable number. As of 2019, that’s up to 1.25 million.1 That Q clearances would be about 10% of that seems reasonable once I consider it, but if you had told me it was 5%, or 15%, I also might have thought that was reasonable, too, in the absence of information.

Second, there’s an interesting amount of fluctuation there. From 2018 to 2019, it grew by 3,341 people, but then the next year it grew by 7,649 people, but then it dropped by almost 6,000 people. That strikes me as a pretty impressive amount of variance. A nearly 10% gain, followed by a 6% loss. But again, I don’t have any more data than this tiny snapshot, so it is hard to say more about it.

Anyway, I thought people would be interested (and wanted to have an “answer” out there in case anyone else Googled this question in the future).

Obligatory “quick Excel graph that is not really necessary since we are talking about a whopping four data points.”

The most amusing thing about the Q Clearance, as an aside, is that while its name sounds so enigmatic and mysterious, its actual origins are aggressively mundane. During the latter part of the Manhattan Project, they created a new form called the Personnel Security Questionnaire that would be the basis of their background checks. When the Atomic Energy Commission took over administration of the US nuclear complex, they inherited the same form. In figuring out early clearance levels, they decided that maybe they ought to just call them P, S, and Q, after the PSQ form.

“P” would be for people who didn’t need access to Restricted Data and had no access to it at all; “S” was for frequent visitors to AEC installations who didn’t need access to Restricted Data but still needed to be in places where it might be found; “Q” was for people who needed access to Restricted Data. So instead of being some shadowy name, its name is literally taken from a form. Like many secret matters, the reality is far less interesting once you get the full story.2

  1. Thanks to Steve Aftergood at FAS for sending me this document! []
  2. The P designation is still used today (but not called P Clearance, because it is not a clearance, strictly speaking, but an “approval”). I suspect they retired S at some point because it is easy to confuse with someone who is cleared for Secret information. []

Tags: 2010s, 2020s, Clearances, Department of Energy

This entry was postedon Friday, November 12th, 2021 at 2:41 pmand is filed under Redactions.You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Citation: Alex Wellerstein, "How many people have Q Clearance?," Restricted Data: A Nuclear History Blog, November 12, 2021, accessed July 19, 2024, https://blog.nuclearsecrecy.com/2021/11/12/how-many-people-have-q-clearance/.

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How many people have Q Clearance? (2024)

FAQs

How many people have Q level clearance? ›

In the US, the number of individuals with Q clearance between 2018 and 2021 witnessed a remarkable 10% increase, followed by a subsequent 6% decrease, leaving us with a count of 92,177 as of April 2021. Q clearance, or Q access authorization, is a security clearance granted by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).

What percentage of secret clearances are denied? ›

Statistical Data Overview

Between 2015 and 2020, about 2-5% of security clearance applications faced denial each year. According to the Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals (DOHA), financial issues caused 29% of denials in 2020, while personal conduct and criminal background contributed 18%.

What percentage of applicants get Top Secret clearance? ›

For Confidential clearances, which are the least stringent, approximately 1% of applications face denial. Secret clearances see a higher denial rate at around 3%, due to more rigorous examination. Top Secret clearances, involving extensive background checks and polygraph tests, have the highest denial rate at about 5%.

Is Q clearance equivalent to Top Secret? ›

I saw a job advertised in the paper that required a Top-Secret clearance. Based on what you just said, would the agency that advertised that job accept my Q? A: Under the reciprocity guidelines, a Q is the equivalent of a Top Secret.

What do they look at on Q clearance? ›

During the background and security clearance investigation, investigators will review delinquency in paying debts, tax obligations, certain criminal offenses and the illegal use or possession of drugs.

How rare is a top secret clearance? ›

The total number of individuals with eligibility to access classified information in 2019 (the last year the Office of the Director of National Intelligence released a report) was 4.2 million. Within that figure are 1.3 million individuals with a Top Secret security clearance.

Do people with clearances get paid more? ›

Based on survey data, on average, a security clearance generates 10-20% salary premium with higher clearances commanding the largest increases.

How many people fail to get a security clearance? ›

Just under 10% of applicants are denied by the National Security Agency. Just under 7% are denied by the CIA and just over 7% are rejected by the National Reconnaissance Office. Every candidate is evaluated carefully during the security clearance application process.

Is secret clearance a big deal? ›

A secret clearance provides access to information that could cause a reasonable amount of damage to national security if disclosed without authorization. This level of security clearance requires a new background investigation every 10 years.

What is the easiest security clearance to get? ›

National Security clearances range from confidential, which is the easiest to attain, to Secret, Top Secret, and SCI, which is the most challenging. Public Trust clearances are either low, moderate, or high risk, and Non-sensitive are the least extensive, requiring only criminal background and credit checks.

What are the red flags for security clearance? ›

The most common security clearance disqualifiers include:
  • Not a U.S. Citizen.
  • Not loyal to the U.S. / foreign influence.
  • Illegal drug use/involvement.
  • Mental incompetency or psychological conditions.
  • Dishonorable discharge from the military or revoked security clearance.
  • A history of financial problems.
  • Criminal activity.

What is the hardest security clearance to get? ›

The federal government provides three levels of clearance: confidential, secret, and top secret. Top secret clearance is the highest security clearance level anyone can get.

What is the average salary for Top Secret clearance? ›

As of Jul 9, 2024, the average annual pay for a Top Secret Security Clearance in the United States is $126,833 a year. Just in case you need a simple salary calculator, that works out to be approximately $60.98 an hour. This is the equivalent of $2,439/week or $10,569/month.

What disqualifies you from security clearance? ›

What can disqualify you?
  • You are not a U.S. citizen.
  • You were dishonorably discharged from the military.
  • You are currently involved in illegal drug use.
  • You have been judged as mentally incompetent or mentally incapacitated by a mental health professional.
  • You have had a clearance revoked for security reasons.

How rare is a Top Secret clearance? ›

The total number of individuals with eligibility to access classified information in 2019 (the last year the Office of the Director of National Intelligence released a report) was 4.2 million. Within that figure are 1.3 million individuals with a Top Secret security clearance.

How long does Q clearance take? ›

How Long It Takes to Get a Security Clearance. Security clearance timelines vary, though most are completed within 60 to 120 days of the application submission.

What is the highest secret clearance? ›

There are three levels of security clearance, with the highest level being Top Secret. Secret is the next level of clearance and Confidential is the final. 6.

Does doe Q clearance require polygraph? ›

Under its 2006 regulation, DOE requires that an applicant or employee be polygraph tested only if one of the following five causes is triggered: (1) a counterintelligence evaluation of an applicant or employee reveals that the individual may be engaged in certain activities, including clandestine or unreported ...

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