Culinary Specialist
Culinary Specialists prepare and serve meals aboard ships and at shore installations. They manage galleys, plan menus, order food supplies, and maintain food service sanitation standards.
Overall
Quick Stats
Security Clearance
None
This rate does not require a security clearance.
ASVAB Requirements
Who This Is Best For
Best for individuals who enjoy cooking or food service and want a clear path to restaurant, hospitality, and food management careers. Strong logistics and inventory management skills develop alongside culinary training. Good advancement and generally positive quality of life compared to many operational rates.
+Pros
- ✓Active enlistment bonus available
- ✓Strong civilian career transition
–Cons
- ✗Significant sea duty
Real Opinions
+Positive
“Advancement is decent and the food service skills transfer if you want restaurant management.”
“Placement and advancement opportunities are excellent for qualified Culinary Specialists — one of the better advancement rates in the Navy. Whether you're serving dinner on a submarine, preparing a gourmet meal for foreign dignitaries, or cooking for the White House, your work is essential to keeping morale at its best. There are 23 civilian credentials closely related to CS duties.”
“You get to eat all the time and it's the easiest job in the Navy if you love customer service and actually love cooking for a lot of people. What started as just a job ended up turning into a rewarding 20-year career. The CS rate has one of the best advancement opportunities in the Navy, and culinary certifications transfer directly to civilian food service management.”
–Critical & Mixed
“Everyone complains about the food but nobody wants to do the job. CSs work the longest hours of any rate on the ship.”
“If you apply yourself and look for reasons to excel and enjoy it, you will go far. If you do nothing but complain, you will hate life.”
“Feeding 3000 sailors three meals a day is no small task. The pace is relentless during deployment.”
“Culinary specialists work crazy hours but you feed the whole ship. There is pride in that.”
“Not glamorous but steady work and always in demand on every ship and base.”
Recruiter vs Reality
What the recruiter says vs. what it's actually like.
🫡 Recruiter says
“Culinary specialists are the morale of the ship and learn professional cooking!”
💀 Reality
Source: MyNavyRates researchYou will cook, but expect 14-16 hour days in a hot galley. Meal service happens 4 times a day underway. On submarines it is even more demanding with tighter spaces.
🫡 Recruiter says
“You'll learn culinary skills you can use at any restaurant.”
💀 Reality
Source: veteran feedbackCS work aboard ships is mass-produced cafeteria cooking for hundreds of sailors, not fine dining. The skills are more institutional food service than culinary arts. Shore galleys offer more variety.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CS has great quality of life.”
💀 Reality
Source: sailor forumsCS is one of the hardest-working rates aboard ship. You work split shifts starting at 3 AM, weekends and holidays. When everyone else has liberty, CS is still cooking.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CS advances quickly.”
💀 Reality
Source: navy dataCS is one of the most overmanned rates in the Navy. Promotion to E-5 and E-6 is extremely competitive with advancement rates often below 10%.
🫡 Recruiter says
“You'll learn culinary arts and have a rewarding career feeding the fleet.”
💀 Reality
You work every holiday underway because the crew still needs to eat. "Culinary arts" mostly means mass-producing meals for 300-5,000 people from pre-portioned ingredients. You're running a cafeteria, not a restaurant.
🫡 Recruiter says
“Culinary Specialist hours are like any other rate in the Navy.”
💀 Reality
CSs are up at 3 AM to start breakfast prep. On a ship, the galley runs nearly 18 hours a day. Your shift might be 12-16 hours, and when you're done cooking you still deep-clean the galley.
🫡 Recruiter says
“You'll split your time evenly between sea and shore duty.”
💀 Reality
CSs spend approximately 60% of a 20-year career on sea rotation. Shore duty for a CS often means a base galley with the same early hours and long days — just without the ship rocking.
Training Pipeline — Total ~22 weeks (5 months)
Ship Date Calculator
Enter your MEPS ship date to see when you'll complete each stage.
Promotion SpeedEarn higher pay fasterAverageManning 98%
| Cycle (Year) | Eligible | Selected | Promotion % |
|---|---|---|---|
| E-4254(2025) | 250 | 162 | 65% |
| E-4253(2024) | 245 | 157 | 64% |
| E-5254(2025) | 220 | 65 | 30% |
| E-5253(2024) | 215 | 60 | 28% |
| E-6254(2025) | 120 | 22 | 18% |
| E-6253(2024) | 115 | 20 | 17% |
Bonuses — Click here to see your military pay
Enlistment Bonus
Bonus by Contract Length
5-Year Contract
$5,000
4-Year Contract
$2,500
How to Qualify
- Sign a contract for this rate at MEPS — bonus eligibility is locked at the time of contract signing
- Ship to boot camp and successfully complete Recruit Training Command (RTC) at Great Lakes, IL
- Complete A-School and any required follow-on training in the CS pipeline
- Receive your rate assignment and report to your first duty station
- Bonus is typically paid in installments — 50% after completing training, remainder in anniversary payments
Important Details
- •Longer contracts receive higher bonus amounts
- •Bonus amounts are subject to federal income tax withholding (typically 22%)
- •If you fail to complete training or are separated early, you may be required to repay a prorated portion
- •Bonus availability and amounts change frequently based on Navy manning needs — confirm with your recruiter
You May Qualify for a Navy Enlisted Classification (NEC)
Specialties within this rate you can select, some with additional compensation. Each NEC has its own training, bonus potential, and career path.
Primary specialty code for Culinary Specialist rating
Advanced specialty code for experienced Culinary Specialist personnel
Potential Civilian Post-Navy Outcomes
Chef / Culinary Manager
Transferability: 5/10
$35k–$65k
Free Certifications & Credentials
Certifications and licenses the Navy will pay for free through Navy COOL and on-the-job training.
ServSafe Manager
National Restaurant Assoc
Certified Dietary Manager
ANFP
Lifestyle4/10
Ship vs. Shore Split
60% / 40%
Deployment Frequency
Moderate
Physical Demand
medium — indoor
Watch Standing
3-section in port, 3-section underway
In a 3-section rotation, the crew is divided into three teams. Each team stands an 8-hour watch shift, then has 16 hours off. In port, you stand 24-hour duty roughly every 3 days — one out of every three nights you stay aboard the ship. Underway (when attached to a ship command), the watch schedule runs continuously with shorter rest periods between shifts.
Galley watches: meal prep starts at 0300; mid-rats duty
Common Duty Stations
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Schools + spouse jobs
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Avg waitlist for on-base
95
100 = national avg
—
Schools + spouse jobs
—
Avg waitlist for on-base
135
100 = national avg
—
Schools + spouse jobs
—
Avg waitlist for on-base
92
100 = national avg