Navy Diver
Navy Divers perform underwater ship maintenance, salvage, construction, and explosive ordnance disposal support. They operate in some of the most challenging environments in the military.
Overall
Quick Stats
Security Clearance
Secret~$3K–$15K civilian sector value
Requires a National Agency Check with Local Agency Check and Credit Check (NACLC). Processing typically takes 1–3 months and is initiated early in your training pipeline.
ASVAB Requirements
Who This Is Best For
Best for physically elite individuals who are completely comfortable in the water and want adventure combined with highly specialized skills. Special duty pay, unique deployments, and a direct path to commercial diving careers paying $80K–$150K+ make this exceptionally rewarding. The physical standards are demanding and non-negotiable — if you can meet them, few rates offer this combination of challenge, pay, and post-Navy value.
+Pros
- ✓Active enlistment bonus available
- ✓Strong civilian career transition
–Cons
Real Opinions
+Positive
“Best job in the Navy bar none. You get paid to dive, the community is tight, and the work is exciting every single day.”
“Dive pay, hazardous duty pay, and special duty assignment pay stack up. NDs are some of the highest paid enlisted sailors.”
“Not gonna lie, the pipeline is the hardest thing I have ever done. But the community is tight and the job is incredible.”
“Commercial divers make six figures easy. The Navy pays you to get the training that costs civilians $30K+.”
–Critical & Mixed
“The pipeline is no joke. Dive school has a high attrition rate and the physical standards never stop.”
“Attrition rate is insane. Most people who start the pipeline do not finish. Have a backup plan.”
“Advancement is currently limited for Navy Divers from a career standpoint. Even with perfect evaluations and test scores, you might not make the next paygrade because there simply aren't enough billets. The community is only about 1,250 people. As a Second Class Diver your primary job is ship's husbandry — basically shallow harbor work inspecting hulls.”
“Nothing is as glamorous as recruiting posters imply. If you're a diver for the Navy, you'll be diving when and where they want you to, which probably won't involve hanging out and looking at fish in warm sunny water. Most Navy diving is done in low-visibility situations — touchy-feely dives in murky harbors. And dive school has a high dropout rate around 25-30%.”
Recruiter vs Reality
What the recruiter says vs. what it's actually like.
🫡 Recruiter says
“This is the most elite program in the military. You will be among the best of the best!”
💀 Reality
Source: MyNavyRates researchThe attrition rate is 50-80%. Most candidates do not complete the pipeline and get reassigned to fleet needs. Physical and mental demands are extreme and ongoing.
🫡 Recruiter says
“Navy Divers have the coolest job in the military”
💀 Reality
Source: GlassdoorThe training is brutal, the water is cold, and the work is physically punishing on your body long-term. Joint problems, ear issues, and back injuries are common. The job is incredible but your body pays the price. Make sure you understand the long-term physical cost, not just the adventure.
🫡 Recruiter says
“Navy Divers travel the world doing exciting underwater work.”
💀 Reality
Source: veteran feedbackND work includes a lot of underwater ship hull inspections and maintenance in murky port waters, not crystal-clear tropical diving. The salvage and special operations work is real but not the daily norm.
🫡 Recruiter says
“ND is a small, tight-knit community.”
💀 Reality
Source: sailor forumsTrue, and this means limited advancement opportunities and fewer billets to choose from. Your career path is narrower than larger ratings. The community takes care of its own but options are fewer.
🫡 Recruiter says
“Navy Dive School is tough but if you're in shape you'll make it.”
💀 Reality
Second Class Dive School has roughly 80% attrition. Physical fitness alone doesn't cut it — you need genuine water confidence in zero-visibility, confined spaces.
🫡 Recruiter says
“You'll be doing exciting underwater salvage missions and submarine rescue.”
💀 Reality
Most of your dive time is hull inspections, scraping marine growth, replacing zinc anodes, and fixing underwater valves in cold, murky water. Submarine rescue is rare.
🫡 Recruiter says
“Navy Divers are a tight-knit community with great advancement opportunities.”
💀 Reality
The ND community is tiny — limited billets, limited duty station options, and everyone knows everyone. Your reputation follows you everywhere.
Training Pipeline — Total ~23 weeks (5 months)
Ship Date Calculator
Enter your MEPS ship date to see when you'll complete each stage.
Promotion SpeedEarn higher pay fasterSlowManning 75% (undermanned)
| Cycle (Year) | Eligible | Selected | Promotion % |
|---|---|---|---|
| E-4252-Spring(2024) | 137 | 72 | 53% |
| E-4252-Fall(2024) | 77 | 18 | 23% |
| E-5252-Spring(2024) | 122 | 49 | 40% |
| E-5252-Fall(2024) | 109 | 65 | 60% |
| E-6252-Spring(2024) | 126 | 26 | 21% |
| E-6252-Fall(2024) | 65 | 27 | 42% |
Bonuses — Click here to see your military pay
Enlistment Bonus
Bonus by Contract Length
6-Year Contract
$40,000
5-Year Contract
$30,000
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 ND 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 Navy Diver rating
Advanced specialty code for experienced Navy Diver personnel
Potential Civilian Post-Navy Outcomes
Commercial Diver
Transferability: 8.5/10
$60k–$120k
Underwater Welder
Transferability: 9/10
$75k–$150k
Lifestyle6/10
Ship vs. Shore Split
40% / 60%
Deployment Frequency
Moderate
Physical Demand
high — outdoor
Watch Standing
Mission-dependent rotation, no fixed schedule
Watch standing is a 24-hour duty rotation where sailors take turns manning critical positions aboard the ship or at their command. The rotation determines how frequently you stand watch and how much rest time you get between shifts.
Operational tempo drives schedule. Extended field exercises and real-world missions are common.
Common Duty Stations
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Schools + spouse jobs
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Avg waitlist for on-base
95
100 = national avg
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Schools + spouse jobs
—
Avg waitlist for on-base
135
100 = national avg
—
Schools + spouse jobs
—
Avg waitlist for on-base
92
100 = national avg