Your Guide to ATIS Learning: The Army's New Training Portal (Updated from ALMS)
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The Army Learning Management System (ALMS), the training platform that served Soldiers, NCOs, Department of the Army (DA) civilians, and Army contractors for over 20 years, has officially been replaced. The Army rolled out its successor, ATIS Learning (Army Training Information System), marking one of the most significant upgrades to Army online training in decades.
If you've been searching for ALMS Army, you're in the right place. Everything you used to do in ALMS (completing mandatory compliance courses and tracking your training records) is now done through ATIS Learning.
What Happened to ALMS Army?
ALMS Army had a long run. Over its lifetime, it delivered training to nearly 1.5 million users and offered more than 600 unique course offerings. But the system had become well known for being clunky, crashing frequently, and offering a frustrating user interface. Soldiers had long complained about its usability.
In early 2024, ALMS was taken offline, and the Army migrated approximately 150 million training records to the new system, moving around 20 million records per day during the transition.
Users who had accessed ALMS within the past year retained full access to their training records in ATIS. Those who hadn't logged in within a year may need to request their records separately.

Introducing ATIS Learning: The Replacement for ALMS
ATIS Learning is the online learning component of the broader Army Training Information System, developed by PEO EIS (Program Executive Office Enterprise Information Systems). It launched in March 2024.
The platform is built on a customized version of Moodle, a modern, scalable, open-source learning management system. It was designed from the ground up with usability in mind; direct feedback from Soldiers at all echelons, from company through division level, was incorporated into the system before launch.
You can access ATIS Learning here.
Access requires a CAC (Common Access Card). The ATIS Portal is hosted in the Army's AWS GovCloud environment and is available to anyone with a valid CAC.
What ATIS Learning Offers
ATIS Learning carries forward everything ALMS did and improves on it significantly. Key features include:
- Mandatory Army training courses required for deployment and unit readiness.
- Army-specific compliance courses such as the U.S. Army Threat Awareness and Reporting Program (TARP), Commander's Safety Course, Information Security Program Training, Risk Management training, and more.
- Improved certificate management: Users can now easily access, download, and email their most recently completed training certificates directly from the platform.
- 24/7 availability from anywhere in the world, including at home.
- A modern, user-friendly interface built for current browsers.
- Real-time training record tracking: Soldiers and leaders can view current training completion status at any time.

ATIS Training: The Broader System
ATIS Learning is just one part of the larger ATIS ecosystem. In November 2025, the Army launched ATIS Training, which replaced the Digital Training Management System (DTMS) as the Army's authoritative enterprise training management solution.
ATIS Training is designed for leaders and commanders, offering:
- Leader dashboards to visualize unit training metrics.
- Individual and unit training record management.
- Training schedule building tools.
- Automated administrative processes that significantly reduce the time spent on manual tasks.
- Real-time data on individual Soldier training records.
Together, ATIS Learning and ATIS Training form a unified, modern ecosystem that replaces both ALMS and DTMS.
Accessing ATIS and AKO Offline
As with ALMS, AKO Offline (Army Knowledge Offline) remains a useful hub that consolidates access to a wide variety of military portals, including links to ATIS, TRICARE, the Army Career Tracker (ACT), military pay information, and more.
For questions or technical issues, the ATIS Customer Support Center remains available to assist Soldiers, training managers, and DA civilians. Self-help resources are also available online through the ATIS portal.
Why the Upgrade Matters
The move from ALMS to ATIS is part of a broader Army effort to modernize the systems Soldiers interact with every day. ALMS had reached end-of-life, and the Army needed a platform that could handle the growing needs of a modern fighting force well into the 21st century.
The result is a faster, more stable, and more intuitive training experience, one that saves time for both Soldiers completing training and leaders managing it.
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BY TRACY FUGA
Military Spouse & Military Lifestyle Writer at VeteranLife
Tracy Fuga is a San Diego-based writer, editor, and marketing professional with nearly two decades of experience in content creation and communications. A former editor at MARCOA Media — the original publisher of MyBaseGuide — she has a long-standing connection to the military community as the pro...
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Tracy Fuga is a San Diego-based writer, editor, and marketing professional with nearly two decades of experience in content creation and communications. A former editor at MARCOA Media — the original publisher of MyBaseGuide — she has a long-standing connection to the military community as the pro...



