As she was sitting in her second-period class on what seemed like another normal, boring day of school, her phone
started buzzing. At first, she didn’t think anything of it, but as time passed, the buzzing didn’t stop, and she started to think that something was seriously wrong.
She asked to be excused for a couple of minutes, and she went outside just as her mom called to tell her the news.
When she heard, she couldn’t stop crying. What was the news that she heard? The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints had changed the availability age for young women to serve a mission, so instead of going at 19, they can now go at 18. The change was made on Nov. 21, 2025, when the Church announced it on their Facebook page and on their Church News app and website.
This was the recent experience of senior Emma Wallace, but girls all over the world were having similar ones, and a
lot of them had similar reactions. They were thrilled.
“My mom was freaking out and then her freaking out made me super excited,” senior Lucy Hiatt said, “and then I was
like, ‘Oh my gosh, I can leave right out of high school.’”
Both Wallace and Hiatt have already received their mission calls. Wallace is going to the North Carolina Charlotte
mission, and Hiatt is going to the Texas Dallas East mission.
“At first I was a little disappointed, but I am so excited now because there are so many miracles that I’ve seen from
[having my mission call],” Hiatt said.
For some girls who wanted to begin to get an education, it was hard to go to school for a year and then leave for a
year and a half, because when they would come back, it was difficult to remember what they had learned.
“I think it gives young women options,” seminary teacher Audrey Thompson said, “it’s difficult to think about starting
something like your education or a job and then hitting pause on that and then going on a mission and then trying to pick it back up.”
For others, it was a gap year that they didn’t quite know how to fill, but now they no longer have to worry about it.
“They love, and I love for them, that they don’t have to wait or maybe tread water while they wait to go on a mission,”
Thompson said.
Others may be excited about the mission changes, but are still choosing to serve at 19.
“I would just say don’t let other people and their excitement make you feel like you are expected to leave at 18. There
are so many different answers and so many different pathways you can take,” Wallace said.
Along with the availability of age for young women to serve missions, the Church also opened 55 new missions
throughout the world.
“I think that with the new 55 missions, I think the amount of missionaries that are going to be going out is going to
increase a lot,” Wallace said. “I think it just kind of goes to show that the church is actually expanding to the world.”

