Career & Pay
Which Navy ratings promote the fastest?
TL;DR โ Quick Answer
Undermanned technical ratings like CTN, IT, IS, and the nuclear rates (EMN, ETN, MMN) consistently have the highest advancement percentages. Some promote 40-60% of eligible sailors per cycle while overmanned ratings promote fewer than 5%. Your rate choice is the single biggest factor in how fast you make rank.
Why some rates promote 10x faster than others
Navy advancement is driven by quotas, and quotas are driven by manning. Ratings that are undermanned (CREO 1) receive more advancement slots because the Navy needs more sailors at higher paygrades in those jobs. Ratings that are overmanned (CREO 3) receive fewer slots because the Navy already has enough senior sailors. This creates enormous differences: in a given cycle, IT might advance 50% of eligible E-5s to E-6 while HM advances 3%. Same exam, same effort, completely different outcomes. The advancement dashboard shows current percentages for every rating.
The consistently fastest-promoting ratings
Based on recent advancement cycle data, these ratings consistently have the highest promotion rates: **Information Warfare** โ CTN, IT, IS, CTR, and CWT regularly advance 30-60% of eligible sailors at E-5 and E-6. The cybersecurity field is growing faster than the Navy can fill it. **Nuclear** โ EMN, ETN, and MMN have high advancement because attrition in the nuclear pipeline keeps the community undermanned. Those who survive training promote quickly. **Special Operations** โ SO, SB, EOD, and ND have small communities with high advancement, though the selection pipelines are extremely demanding. Browse the fastest-promoting rankings for the full list sorted by advancement speed.
The slowest-promoting ratings
Ratings that are overmanned or have very large populations tend to have the slowest advancement. **Hospital Corpsman (HM)** is the classic example โ it is the largest rating in the Navy, which means thousands of sailors compete for a limited number of E-5 and E-6 slots. HM advancement to E-5 often hovers around 10-15%, and E-6 can drop below 5%. **Culinary Specialist (CS)**, **Boatswain's Mate (BM)**, and **Master-at-Arms (MA)** also tend to have slow advancement. Slow advancement does not mean the rating is bad โ HM is one of the most respected ratings in the Navy โ but it means you will spend more time at junior paygrades. Check your target rate's advancement history on the advancement dashboard before signing your contract.
How CREO levels predict your promotion speed
The Navy publishes CREO (Career Reenlistment Objectives) designations for every rating: **CREO 1** (undermanned) โ the Navy actively needs more sailors. Advancement is fast, bonuses are likely, and reenlistment is easy. **CREO 2** (balanced) โ normal manning. Advancement is moderate. **CREO 3** (overmanned) โ the Navy has too many sailors. Advancement is slow, bonuses are rare, and reenlistment may be restricted through C-WAY. CREO levels can change as manning fluctuates, but ratings that have been CREO 1 for years (like IT and CTN) are unlikely to suddenly become overmanned. Current CREO designations are reflected in each rate profile page.
E-2 to E-4 advancement: automatic on time-in-service
Since NAVADMIN 168/23 took effect on 1 July 2024, advancement through E-4 (Petty Officer 3rd Class) is no longer competitive โ it is automatic on time-in-service (TIS). Sailors advance to E-2 at 9 months TIS, E-3 at 18 months TIS, and E-4 at 30 months TIS, provided they hold a CO retention recommendation and meet PFA / body-composition standards. The 2026 Enlisted Advancement Manual update confirms this as the standing policy. E-5 is now the first competitive promotion โ that is where the Navy-Wide Advancement Exam, Final Multiple Score, and quota system begin. A handful of rate programs (AEF, ATF, SECF, NF) can beat the 30-month TIS clock through automatic pipeline-based advancement. Compare advancement speed across rates on the advancement dashboard.
E-5 and E-6: where rate choice really hurts (or helps)
The gap between fast and slow ratings widens dramatically at E-5 and E-6. An IT might make E-5 in 2-3 years and E-6 in 5-6 years. An HM might take 5-7 years for E-5 and 10+ years for E-6. Over a 20-year career, that is hundreds of thousands of dollars in pay difference. At E-6, you are also eligible for leadership positions, shore duty rotations, and the Chief (E-7) board. Making E-6 faster means a longer window to compete for Chief. Every year you are stuck at E-5 is a year you are not building the E-6 evaluation record that the Chief board reviews.
Should you pick a rate just for fast advancement?
No โ but advancement should be a major factor in your decision. Picking a rate you hate just because it promotes fast will make you miserable. But between two rates you would enjoy equally, choose the one with better advancement. The ideal outcome is finding a rating that aligns with your interests AND has strong promotion rates. The rate-matching quiz helps you identify rates that fit your personality and priorities, and you can cross-reference results with the advancement dashboard to find the sweet spot. Also consider: fast advancement means higher pay, which improves your quality of life and your family's financial security. Do not underestimate how much faster promotions compound over a career. Use the pay calculator to see the difference.
Useful Tools & Pages
Related Articles
How does promotion work in the Navy?
Navy advancement depends on exam scores, evaluations, time in rate, and available quotas. Some ratings promote over 50% of eligible sailors while others promote less than 5%. Your rate choice directly affects how fast you can advance.
Read article โWhat is the Final Multiple Score (FMS) and how is it calculated?
The Final Multiple Score (FMS) is the single number that determines whether you get promoted to E-5 or E-6. It combines your advancement exam score, performance evaluations (RSCA PMA), time-in-rate points, PNA points, awards, and education. The Navy ranks every eligible sailor by FMS within their rating and draws a cutoff line. If your FMS is above the line, you advance. If not, you wait another cycle. (E-4 no longer uses FMS โ under NAVADMIN 168/23, advancement through E-4 is automatic at 30 months time-in-service.)
Read article โHow do PNA points work and how do you stack them for promotion?
PNA (Passed Not Advanced) points are bonus points added to your Final Multiple Score for each cycle where you passed the advancement exam but were not selected. They accumulate over multiple cycles and can be the difference between making rate and missing the cutoff. PNA rewards persistence โ sailors who keep passing the exam build an increasing advantage each cycle.
Read article โHow do you choose the right Navy rate for you?
Choosing a Navy rate means weighing your ASVAB scores, lifestyle preferences, civilian career goals, and willingness to deploy or go to sea. Start by identifying which ratings you qualify for, then narrow the list by what matters most to you.
Read article โReady to find your rate?
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