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FBI plans to drop two hiring steps for aspiring agents

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Federal Bureau of Investigation J. Edgar Hoover FBI building in Washington DC

FBI eases path for staff seeking badges

The FBI plans to remove two key steps for support staff who want to become special agents.

According to a Reuters report from Feb. 19, 2026, the bureau will drop the panel interview and writing test for internal applicants.

Under the new process, current employees who pass an online exam and get a division leader’s recommendation would head straight to the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va. The changes do not apply to outside applicants.

Approved stamp on application form or business agreement document

FBI calls it a paperwork fix

FBI spokesperson Ben Williamson did not push back on the report but rejected the idea that the bureau is lowering the bar.

He said the FBI is cutting out steps that repeat what current employees have already been through.

Applicants would still need a recommendation from an FBI division leader, and they would still have to complete the full training program at Quantico. The bureau framed the move as streamlining, not softening.

Technology, recruitment and business people waiting in queue for job interview process in office with human resources, hiring candidates with phone, laptop and tablet for vacancy

Retired agent says interviews catch problems

Not everyone buys that explanation. Jeff Crocker, a retired supervisory special agent who screened applicants during a career spanning more than 20 years, told Reuters the changes would lower recruiting standards.

In the traditional process, three trained agents question candidates about their life experiences, public speaking skills, and critical thinking.

Crocker said that interview weeds out people who lack the qualities the job demands. One source told Reuters the panel historically screens out a large number of applicants.

Detective office interior with workplace and investigation board

Agents handle cases that hit close to home

FBI special agents investigate the kinds of federal crimes that touch everyday life: terrorism, fraud, cyberattacks, public corruption, and child exploitation.

The bureau has long held a reputation as the most elite law enforcement agency in the country, with strict standards for the people who carry out those investigations.

Critics worry that pulling back on screening could affect the quality of the work that keeps communities safe.

FBI agent in the field

Patel set a goal of 700 new agents

Director Kash Patel wants to bring on 700 new special agents in 2026. The FBI typically has a workforce of about 10,000 agents.

But budget cuts and early-retirement incentives were on track to shrink the specialized-agent ranks from roughly 13,000 to about 11,000 by September 2025, according to The New York Times.

That staffing pressure is a big reason the bureau is looking for faster ways to move internal candidates through the pipeline.

HRT selectees distinguishable during selection only by number and color of clothes

Earlier changes already shortened FBI training

This is not the first time Patel has shaken up hiring.

In August 2025, The New York Times reported that Patel and then-Deputy Director Dan Bongino planned to drop the requirement that new agents hold a four-year college degree.

The Times also reported that one class of recruits trained for just eight weeks at Quantico, down from about 18 weeks. The FBI’s own training guide, revised in August 2025, still lists the program at 18 weeks.

FBI agents work at scene at night with police car lights and ambulance in background, back view of three FBI agents going towards criminal scene

Patel wants agents working the streets

Patel has pushed to refocus the bureau on violent crime and immigration enforcement. He has called agents “cops” and put more weight on street-level law enforcement.

Some former FBI officials say that approach misses the point.

They argue the bureau’s traditional strength is national security work and complex fraud cases, which are different from regular police work.

Patel has said the shift toward violent crime and homeland defense is already producing results.

ICE police agent officer of Immigration and Customs Enforcement with close-up of POLICE ICE marking on back of stab proof vest uniform worn by officers at immigrant incident scene

Other federal agencies also sped up hiring

The FBI is not alone in this push. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) hired more than 12,000 officers and agents in 2025, more than doubling its law enforcement ranks from about 10,000 to roughly 22,000.

ICE reportedly cut its own training from five months to 42 days during that surge. The broader trend comes as the Trump administration has made law enforcement a priority across federal agencies.

Detail of messy desk with books, binders, files and papers stacked up high in disorganized mess

FBI says agent applications nearly doubled

Patel said the FBI received nearly 45,000 special agent applications in fiscal year 2025, which he called a 99% jump over the prior 15-year average.

In March 2025 alone, the bureau got about 5,577 applications, the highest monthly total since April 2016, according to FBI data. The monthly average sat at about 2,797 in 2023 and rose to about 3,383 in 2024.

Those figures come from FBI leadership and have not been independently verified.

FBI Special Agents instruct marksmanship techniques to police officers from Colombia, Guatemala and Dominican Republic during TRADEWINDS 24 (TW24) at the Regional Police Training Centre in Christ Church, Barbados, May 6, 2024. TW24 is a U.S. Southern Command-sponsored, regionally oriented annual exercise and is part of the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s Large Scale Global Exercise 24, a series of all-domain military exercises executed alongside Allies and partners around the globe. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Joshua Taeckens)

The old process put candidates through 800 hours

Traditionally, FBI support staff who wanted to become agents had to pass a written exam, sit for a panel interview with three trained agents, and complete a writing assessment. Those who made it then spent about 18 weeks at Quantico.

Training covers academics, firearms, defensive tactics, investigative techniques, and hands-on exercises in a mock town called Hogan’s Alley.

New agents log more than 800 hours of training before they graduate.

Appointment Date Question Concept with Calendar, Question Mark, and Pen Representing Scheduling Uncertainty and Planning

No official start date set yet

The FBI had not formally announced the changes at the time of the Reuters report, and it remains unclear when the new process would kick in or how many employees might apply under it.

The bureau has said all applicants must still complete Quantico training.

The debate over whether this amounts to cutting red tape or lowering standards will likely continue as Patel works toward his 700-agent hiring goal.

Close up on FBI sign on uniform of the agent, only an arm is in the frame. FBI in close-up

Both sides see it differently

The FBI says these changes remove unnecessary steps for people who have already been vetted to work at the bureau. All candidates must still finish Quantico and get a division leader’s recommendation.

Critics say the panel interview and writing assessment catch things that an online test cannot, like judgment and communication under pressure.

Removing them, they argue, risks putting less-qualified people in roles with real investigative power. Reuters based its report on two sources, one named and one anonymous.

This article was created with AI assistance and human editing.

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John Ghost is a professional writer and SEO director. He graduated from Arizona State University with a BA in English (Writing, Rhetorics, and Literacies). As he prepares for graduate school to become an English professor, he writes weird fiction, plays his guitars, and enjoys spending time with his wife and daughters. He lives in the Valley of the Sun. Learn more about John on Muck Rack.

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