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Home/Articles/How Navy Promotion Works: Advancement Rates Explained

Career & Pay

How does promotion work in the Navy?

TL;DR โ€” Quick Answer

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.

The advancement cycle and Final Multiple Score (FMS)

The Navy runs two advancement cycles per year (spring and fall) for E-5 and E-6. Sailors take a rating-specific exam, and their scores are combined with their RSCA PMA (Relative Standing Conditioning Average / Performance Mark Average), time-in-rate (TIR) points, PNA (Passed Not Advanced) points, awards, and education to create a Final Multiple Score (FMS). Those above the cutoff are selected. E-4 is no longer part of the cycle โ€” under NAVADMIN 168/23, it is automatic at 30 months time-in-service. The advancement dashboard shows current promotion percentages for every rating.

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Chart / Data

Navy advancement cycle results by rating โ€” quotas, advancement percentages, and selection data from the latest NAVADMIN

View on MyNavy HRโ†’

CREO levels and why your rate matters

The Navy categorizes each rating into CREO (Career Reenlistment Objectives) levels: CREO 1 (undermanned), CREO 2 (normal), and CREO 3 (overmanned). CREO 1 ratings might advance 60% of eligible E-5s to E-6, while CREO 3 ratings might advance only 3%. This means a top performer in an overmanned rating can be passed over for years, while an average performer in an undermanned rating advances quickly. Check the fastest-promoting rates before choosing.

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Chart / Data

Community Health and manning status by rating โ€” CREO designations showing which ratings are undermanned, balanced, or overmanned

View on MyNavy HRโ†’

E-7 and above: the board process

Promotion to Chief Petty Officer (E-7) and above works differently. There is no exam. Instead, a selection board reviews your entire service record, evaluations, education, and community involvement. The board process makes E-7 the most significant career milestone in the Navy. Sustained superior performance over years is what gets selected.

Manning levels and promotion

The Navy adjusts advancement quotas based on manning levels. Ratings that are undermanned get more promotion slots. Ratings that are overmanned get fewer. Sailors in overmanned ratings can apply to cross-rate through C-WAY (Career Waypoints), the Navy's reenlistment and rating conversion system, to move into undermanned ratings with better promotion prospects. You can track current manning health on each rate profile page. Choosing an undermanned rating does not just mean a bonus today; it can mean faster promotion for your entire career.

Useful Tools & Pages

  • โ†’Advancement Dashboard
  • โ†’Fastest-Promoting Rates
  • โ†’Compare All Rates

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