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Merit Badges
 

You can learn about sports, crafts, science, trades, business, and future careers as you earn merit badges. There are more than 135 merit badges, and any Scout, or any qualified Venturer or Sea Scout may earn any of these at any time.
 

Pick a Subject. Talk to your unit leader about your interests. Read the requirements of the merit badges you think might interest you, and pick one to earn. Your leader will give you the name of a person from a list of counselors. These individuals have special knowledge in their merit badge subjects and are interested in helping you.

 

Scout Buddy System. You must have another person with you at each meeting with the merit badge counselor. This person can be your parent or legal guardian, or another registered adult.

 

Call the Merit Badge Counselor. Get a signed Application for Merit Badge, No. 34124 or No. 34130, from your unit leader. Get in touch with the merit badge counselor and explain that you want to earn the badge. The counselor may ask to meet you to explain what is expected and to start helping you meet the requirements. You should also discuss work you have already started or possibly completed.

 

At the first meeting, you and your merit badge counselor will review and may start working on the requirements. In some cases, you may share the work you have already started or completed.

 

Unless otherwise specified, work on a requirement can be started at any time. Ask your counselor to help you learn the things you need to know or do. You should read the merit badge pamphlet on the subject. Many troops, schools, and public libraries have them.

 

Show Your Stuff. When you are ready, call the counselor again to make an appointment. When you go, take along the things you have made to meet the requirements. If they are too big to move, take pictures or have an adult tell in writing what you have done. The counselor will test you on each requirement to make sure you know your stuff and have done or can do the things required.

 

Get the Badge. When the counselor is satisfied you have met each requirement, he or she will sign your application. Give the signed application to your unit leader so your merit badge emblem can be secured for you.

 

Merit badge requirements are revised as needed to reflect updated information and technology. Refer to the latest Scouts BSA Requirements book for merit badge requirement updates. The current Scouts BSA Requirements book is available from your local Scouting merchandise distributor. It may also be ordered online at ScoutShop.org.

 

Requirements. You are expected to meet the requirements as they are stated—no more and no less. You must do exactly what is stated in the requirements. If it says “show or demonstrate,” that is what you must do. Just telling about it isn’t enough. The same thing holds true for such words as “make,” “list,” “in the field,” and “collect,” “identify,” and “label.”

 

The requirements listed below are the current and official requirements of the Boy Scouts of America. Occasionally, the requirements will not match those in the printed Scout Handbook, the annual Scouts BSA Requirements book, or some merit badge pamphlets because of the timing of their printing schedules.

If a new edition of a merit badge pamphlet is introduced with updated requirements after the Scouts BSA Requirements book has been released, a Scout who is starting the badge may choose to follow either set of requirements until the end of the year. At the start of the new year, Scouts who are beginning must use only the new requirements.

 

If a Scout has already started working on a merit badge when a new edition of the pamphlet is introduced, they may continue to use the same pamphlet and fulfill the requirements therein to earn the badge. They need not start over again with the new pamphlet and revised requirements.

There is no time limit for starting and completing a merit badge, but all work must be completed by the time a Scout turns 18.

List of Merit Badges

 

  1. American Business

  2. American Cultures

  3. American Heritage

  4. American Labor

  5. Animal Science

  6. Archaeology

  7. Archery

  8. Architecture

  9. Art

  10. Astronomy

  11. Athletics

  12. Automotive Maintenance

  13. Aviation

  14. Backpacking

  15. Basketry

  16. Bird Study

  17. Bugling

  18. Camping

  19. Canoeing

  20. Chemistry

  21. Chess

  22. Cinematography

  23. Citizenship in the Community

  24. Citizenship in the Nation

  25. Citizenship in the World

  26. Climbing

  27. Coin Collecting

  28. Collections

  29. Communication

  30. Composite Materials

  31. Cooking

  32. Crime Prevention

  33. Cycling

  34. Dentistry

  35. Digital Technology

  36. Disabilities Awareness

  37. Dog Care

  38. Drafting

  39. Electricity

  40. Electronics

  41. Emergency Preparedness

  42. Energy

  43. Engineering

  44. Entrepreneurship

  45. Environmental Science

  46. Family Life

  47. Farm Mechanics

  48. Fingerprinting

  49. Fire Safety

  50. First Aid

  51. Fish and Wildlife Management

  52. Fishing

  53. Fly Fishing

  54. Forestry

  55. Game Design

  56. Gardening

  57. Genealogy

  58. Geocaching

  59. Geology

  60. Golf

  61. Graphic Arts

  62. Hiking

  63. Home Repairs

  64. Horsemanship

  65. Indian Lore

  66. Insect Study

  67. Inventing

  68. Journalism

  69. Kayaking

  70. Landscape Architecture

  71. Law

  72. Leatherwork

  73. Lifesaving

  74. Mammal Study

  75. Medicine

  76. Metalwork

  77. Mining in Society

  78. Model Design and Building

  79. Motorboating

  80. Moviemaking

  81. Music

  82. Nature

  83. Nuclear Science

  84. Oceanography

  85. Orienteering

  86. Painting

  87. Personal Fitness

  88. Personal Management

  89. Pets

  90. Photography

  91. Pioneering

  92. Plant Science

  93. Plumbing

  94. Pottery

  95. Programming

  96. Public Health

  97. Public Speaking

  98. Pulp and Paper

  99. Radio

  100. Railroading

  101. Reading

  102. Reptile and Amphibian Study

  103. Rifle Shooting

  104. Robotics

  105. Rowing

  106. Safety

  107. Salesmanship

  108. Scouting Heritage

  109. Scholarship

  110. Scuba Diving

  111. Sculpture

  112. Search & Rescue

  113. Shotgun Shooting

  114. Skating

  115. Small-Boat Sailing

  116. Snow Sports

  117. Soil and Water Conservation

  118. Space Exploration

  119. Sports

  120. Stamp Collecting

  121. Surveying

  122. Sustainability

  123. Swimming

  124. Textile

  125. Theater

  126. Traffic Safety

  127. Truck Transportation

  128. Veterinary Medicine

  129. Water Sports

  130. Weather

  131. Welding

  132. Whitewater

  133. Wilderness Survival

  134. Wood Carving

  135. Woodwork

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