Demographics & Diversity
Which Navy jobs have no combat exposure?
TL;DR โ Quick Answer
Most Navy ratings are non-combat. Administrative, medical, technical, and support ratings like IT, YN, PS, HM (in non-FMF roles), MC, and MU involve no direct combat duties. Even on deployed ships, most sailors perform their technical specialty rather than engage in combat.
The Navy is mostly non-combat
Unlike the infantry-heavy Army and Marine Corps, the vast majority of Navy sailors never engage in direct combat. The Navy's primary mission is to operate ships, aircraft, and technology platforms. Most ratings exist to maintain, operate, and support these systems. Even during deployments, your daily work is the same technical job you trained for in A-School.
Ratings with zero combat duties
Musician (MU), Religious Programs Specialist (RP), Personnel Specialist (PS), Yeoman (YN), Culinary Specialist (CS), and Logistics Specialist (LS) are entirely non-combat. Information warfare ratings like IT, IS, and the CT community work with computers and intelligence data. These ratings are as far from a battlefield as any military job can be. Browse the full rate comparison to filter by work environment.
Ratings with potential combat exposure
Special Warfare Operator (SO), Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD), Hospital Corpsman with Fleet Marine Force (HM-FMF), and Master-at-Arms (MA) are the primary ratings where combat exposure is possible. Gunner's Mate (GM) and Fire Controlman (FC) operate weapons systems but typically from the safety of a ship. The rates with least deployment is a good starting point for low-risk options.
Ship-based safety
Even sailors deployed on warships in active regions are generally safe. Modern naval warfare is conducted at range using missiles, electronic warfare, and aircraft. The last time a US Navy ship was successfully attacked by an enemy force was rare in recent decades. Your primary risk on a ship is occupational hazards (machinery, weather, fatigue) rather than enemy fire.
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