Cryptologic Technician Collection
Cryptologic Technician Collection specialists operate electronic collection and signals intelligence systems. They identify, collect, and report on electronic emissions.
Overall
Quick Stats
Security Clearance
Top Secret / Sensitive Compartmented Information~$15K–$50K civilian sector value
Requires a Single Scope Background Investigation (SSBI), including interviews with references, financial review, and a possible polygraph. The process typically takes 6–12 months and is initiated during your training pipeline.
ASVAB Requirements
Who This Is Best For
Best for detail-oriented individuals who enjoy pattern recognition and want a career where their work directly informs military and national security decisions. TS/SCI clearance and direct intelligence community experience make this one of the strongest post-Navy career paths available. Ideal for focused, analytical personalities.
+Pros
- ✓Active enlistment bonus available
- ✓Strong civilian career transition
–Cons
- ✗Long A-school pipeline
Real Opinions
+Positive
“Fulfilling work, intelligent atmosphere, and an interesting job field that can help you learn a lot. You also gain management experience when being put into a position delegating work to other sailors.”
“You receive a Top Secret/SCI clearance, which really helps with getting a good job once you are out of the Navy.”
“Joining the military was one of the best decisions of my life. Good benefits and comradeship.”
“Best decision I made was going CTR. The clearance alone is worth it, and the skills transfer directly to six-figure civilian jobs.”
–Critical & Mixed
“Inconsistency in the job depending on the command you are stationed at. When attached to a ship, there are minimal opportunities for practice other than when your ship is actually out to sea.”
“Be prepared for shore duty boredom and watch rotations. The clearance process is also stressful and takes forever.”
“Many CTRs enjoy the mission impact and steady technical growth, and training opportunities are genuinely valuable. However, conflicts with superiors, last-minute schedule changes, and extended time away from family due to lengthy work hours are real problems. About 60 percent of assignments are at sea.”
Recruiter vs Reality
What the recruiter says vs. what it's actually like.
🫡 Recruiter says
“You will work with cutting-edge cyber technology and get a top secret clearance!”
💀 Reality
Source: MyNavyRates researchThe clearance is real and valuable, but daily work can involve a lot of routine network maintenance and help-desk tickets. Cutting-edge tech varies widely by command.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CTR is the best signals intelligence job in the military.”
💀 Reality
Source: veteran feedbackCTR work involves long hours monitoring communications signals, much of it repetitive. The exciting analysis moments are real but infrequent. Most of the work is data processing and report writing.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CTR works in small classified spaces with elite teams.”
💀 Reality
Source: sailor forumsTrue for some billets, but many CTRs end up on ships doing watch rotations in the SSES spaces. The work environment varies dramatically by assignment.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CTR is the premier signals intelligence collection rate.”
💀 Reality
Most of your watch is monitoring RF spectrum traffic waiting for something to happen. The high-tempo moments are real but punctuated by long stretches of routine monitoring and log entries. Report writing is a huge part of the job.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CTRs get great shore duty at places like Hawaii and Georgia.”
💀 Reality
NIOC Hawaii, Georgia, and Texas are real duty stations. But roughly 60% of CTR assignments are sea duty in the SSES space aboard ships, standing watches in a tiny classified space below decks.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CTR works with elite teams on classified missions.”
💀 Reality
Some billets support special operations. But many CTRs are on routine watch floors processing large volumes of signals data. The daily reality is more data processing than action-movie intelligence work.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CTR training is short and then you're operational fast.”
💀 Reality
A-school is about 19 weeks, but after that you face months of qualification at your first command before you are trusted to work independently.
🫡 Recruiter says
“CTR has great civilian job prospects in the intel community.”
💀 Reality
CTR experience translates to NSA and contractor jobs, but those want specific system experience and certifications. The clearance is the real golden ticket — make sure you line up a cleared job before it lapses.
🫡 Recruiter says
“You'll be doing real intelligence that matters.”
💀 Reality
CTR SIGINT reports do feed national-level intelligence products. But at the junior level, you are a small cog collecting and forwarding data that analysts further up the chain interpret.
Training Pipeline — Total ~30 weeks (7 months)
Ship Date Calculator
Enter your MEPS ship date to see when you'll complete each stage.
Promotion SpeedEarn higher pay fasterSlowManning 80% (undermanned)
| Cycle (Year) | Eligible | Selected | Promotion % |
|---|---|---|---|
| E-4252-Spring(2024) | 192 | 43 | 22% |
| E-4252-Fall(2024) | 226 | 102 | 45% |
| E-5252-Spring(2024) | 140 | 22 | 16% |
| E-5252-Fall(2024) | 42 | 47 | 112% |
| E-6252-Spring(2024) | 55 | 23 | 42% |
| E-6252-Fall(2024) | 135 | 17 | 13% |
Bonuses — Click here to see your military pay
Enlistment Bonus
Bonus by Contract Length
6-Year Contract
$20,000
5-Year Contract
$15,000
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 CTR 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
- •This rate requires a security clearance — failure to obtain clearance may affect bonus eligibility
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 Cryptologic Technician Collection rating
Advanced specialty code for experienced Cryptologic Technician Collection personnel
Potential Civilian Post-Navy Outcomes
SIGINT Analyst
Transferability: 8/10
$68k–$115k
Free Certifications & Credentials
Certifications and licenses the Navy will pay for free through Navy COOL and on-the-job training.
CompTIA Security+
CompTIA
Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP)
ISC2
Lifestyle8/10
Ship vs. Shore Split
25% / 75%
Deployment Frequency
Low
Physical Demand
low — indoor
Watch Standing
4-section watch rotation (8 on / 16 off)
In a 4-section rotation, the crew is divided into four teams. Each team stands a 6-hour watch shift, then has 18 hours off before their next watch. In port, you stand 24-hour duty roughly every 4 days — meaning you stay aboard the ship overnight on your duty day.
Watch stations often in climate-controlled spaces. SCIF access may be required for some watches.
Media & Videos
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