For Many Roles, the Answer Is Simple: No

If your job requires a security clearance, losing that clearance is not a minor administrative issue.

👉 It is often the condition that allows you to work at all

For many professionals—especially in defense contracting, intelligence, cybersecurity, and federal service—clearance eligibility is not just a credential.

👉 It is the gatekeeper to employment

When a clearance is suspended, denied, or revoked:

  • access to classified systems may stop immediately

  • core job duties may no longer be legally performed

  • employment may be paused or terminated

  • career trajectory can change overnight


Where This Happens in the Clearance Process

This issue typically arises when:

  • your clearance is under investigation

  • your clearance is suspended

  • you receive a Statement of Reasons (SOR)

  • your clearance is denied or revoked

To understand how these stages connect, see:

Security Clearance Insiders Resource Hub

security clearance process guide


What Happens to Your Job When You Lose Your Clearance

The impact depends on your role.


1. Contractor Positions

For many contractors:

👉 clearance eligibility is required to perform the job

If your clearance is suspended or revoked:

  • you may be removed from the contract immediately

  • your employer may not have a non-cleared role available

  • employment may end quickly

Contractor roles are especially vulnerable because:

👉 there is often no alternative position


2. Federal Employees

Federal employees may have more flexibility—but not always.

Possible outcomes include:

  • reassignment to non-cleared duties

  • temporary administrative leave

  • indefinite suspension

  • removal from federal service

In some cases:

👉 employment continues—but career progression is affected


3. Military Personnel

For military members:

  • clearance issues can affect assignments

  • promotions may be impacted

  • certain roles may become unavailable

  • administrative separation may be considered

Clearance and military status are often closely connected.


When This Becomes a Real Problem in Your Case

The situation becomes serious when:

  • your clearance is formally suspended

  • your access is removed

  • your employer cannot accommodate non-cleared work

  • your role is clearance-dependent

This is often the moment people realize:

👉 the clearance was not optional—it was essential


Can You Be Reassigned Without a Clearance?

Sometimes—but not always.

It depends on:

  • your employer

  • your position

  • availability of non-cleared roles

In many cases:

👉 reassignment is temporary or limited

And in contractor roles:

👉 reassignment is often not possible


What Happens If Your Clearance Is Suspended

A suspension is often the first major disruption.

During suspension:

  • access is paused

  • duties may stop

  • pay may be affected

  • the case is still under review

👉 Learn more:

Security Clearance Suspended Without Pay

Some suspensions become:

👉 indefinite

Which can create long-term employment issues.


What Happens If Your Clearance Is Denied or Revoked

If your clearance is denied or revoked:

  • eligibility is removed

  • employment may end

  • future cleared roles become more difficult to obtain

👉 Learn more:

Security Clearance Denied: What Happens Next


Why Waiting Makes This Worse

Many people assume:

👉 “I’ll deal with this if it becomes a problem”

But:

  • the record continues to develop

  • issues escalate over time

  • employment risk increases

  • options narrow

By the time job impact occurs:

👉 the case is often harder to fix


How Clearance Issues Affect Your Career Long-Term

Even if you remain employed, clearance issues can affect:

  • promotions

  • special assignments

  • transfers

  • future job opportunities

  • long-term eligibility

Because:

👉 your clearance record is reused over time


Cascading Consequences Beyond Your Current Job

Clearance issues can extend beyond employment.

They may affect:

This is why:

👉 clearance problems rarely stay isolated


What a Security Clearance Lawyer Does in These Situations

A security clearance lawyer helps:

  • assess how the issue affects your job

  • determine available options (appeal, reinstatement, reapplication)

  • structure your response to protect employment where possible

  • coordinate strategy across clearance and employment systems

Because:

👉 your job and your clearance are often inseparable


Why National Security Law Firm Is Different

Security clearance cases are decided inside a federal system.

At National Security Law Firm:

We do not treat clearance issues as isolated legal problems.

👉 We evaluate how they affect your career


Frequently Asked Questions

Can you work without a security clearance?

Sometimes—but many roles require clearance to perform essential duties.

Will I lose my job if my clearance is suspended?

Not always, but many positions cannot continue without active clearance.

Can I be reassigned?

Possibly, depending on your employer and role.

What happens if my clearance is revoked?

You may lose your position and face difficulty obtaining future cleared work.

Can I get my job back if my clearance is restored?

Sometimes—but it depends on timing and employer decisions.


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer Before Job Loss Becomes Permanent

If your clearance is at risk, the most important question is not:

👉 whether you can keep working today

It is:

👉 whether your clearance—and your career—can be preserved

We offer free, confidential consultations to help you:

  • understand your situation

  • evaluate your options

  • protect your job and future

👉 schedule a free consultation


The Record Controls the Case.