myNavyRates.rg
Home/Articles/Navy Jobs That Require Security Clearance
Donate
Compare All RatesQuizPayBonusesASVAB CalculatorAdvancement Name SearchDuty StationsFamily ImpactFree DegreeGearRecruitersBe an OfficerArticlesFAQs
myNavyRates.rg
Donate
Home/Articles/Navy Jobs That Require a Security Clearance (And Why It Matters)

Lifestyle & Specialty

Which Navy jobs require a security clearance?

TL;DR โ€” Quick Answer

Ratings in the information warfare and intelligence communities require TS/SCI clearances. This includes CTN, CTR, CTI, CTT, IS, IT, and CWT. A security clearance is one of the most valuable assets you carry into the civilian job market.

Clearance levels explained

The Navy uses three main clearance levels: Secret, Top Secret (TS), and Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information (TS/SCI). Secret clearance is common across many ratings. TS and TS/SCI are reserved for ratings that handle classified intelligence, communications, and cyber operations. The clearance-required ratings are ranked by civilian salary potential.

๐Ÿ“‹

Infographic

DCSA personnel vetting overview โ€” clearance tiers, investigation types, and the process for obtaining and maintaining security clearances

View on DCSA (Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency)โ†’

Which ratings get TS/SCI

The Cryptologic Technician community (CTR, CTI, CTT, CTM), Intelligence Specialist (IS), Cyber Warfare Technician (CWT, which absorbed the former CTN rating in 2023), and Information Systems Technician (IT) routinely receive TS/SCI clearances. Some submarine ratings (ITR, ITN, ITE, STS, FCA) also receive Top Secret. These clearances are investigated by DCSA and can take 6-12 months to process.

The civilian value of a clearance

A TS/SCI clearance is worth real money in the private sector. Defense contractors, intelligence agencies, and cybersecurity firms actively recruit cleared personnel. Studies show that holding a TS/SCI adds $15,000-$25,000 to annual salary compared to non-cleared positions. The clearance costs the government $50,000+ to investigate, so employers prefer hiring people who already have one.

What can disqualify you

The investigation looks at financial history, criminal record, drug use, foreign contacts, and honesty. Significant debt, recent drug use, or foreign family ties can complicate the process. Being denied a clearance after selecting a clearance-required rating means reclassification to a different rating, which is disruptive. Be honest with your recruiter about any potential issues before choosing a clearance-required rate.

Useful Tools & Pages

  • โ†’Clearance Rankings
  • โ†’Best Tech Jobs
  • โ†’Compare All Rates

Related Articles

Which Navy jobs set you up best for a civilian career?

Information warfare ratings (IT, CTN, IS) and medical ratings (HM) offer the strongest civilian career pipelines. Security clearances, technical certifications, and hands-on experience make these sailors highly competitive in the private sector.

Read article โ†’

How 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 โ†’

Which Navy rates have the biggest enlistment bonuses in 2026?

In 2026, the Navy is offering enlistment bonuses up to $50,000 or more for critical undermanned ratings. Nuclear ratings, special warfare, and select technical ratings consistently offer the largest bonuses. Amounts change frequently based on manning needs.

Read article โ†’

Ready to find your rate?

Take the quiz or browse all 89 Navy ratings with full data.

Find your best rateCompare rates
AboutPrivacyDisclaimerChangelogContactDonate

Not affiliated with the U.S. Navy or Department of Defense.ยทยฉ 2026 myNavyRates.org. All rights reserved.

HomeCompare RatesQuizBonusesASVAB CalculatorMore