Got a wild idea? We build for service members — not the brass, not shareholders. If it's good, it ships.
Suggest a Feature →Diver
Performs underwater construction, demolition, salvage, and repair missions. Operates in rivers, harbors, and coastal environments to support combat and engineering operations.
“You'll be one of roughly 500 active duty Army divers — a specialty so small it barely shows up in the Army's own recruiting materials. The Army Combat Diver Qualification Course is one of the most selective schools in the military, and the community you join is tight, technically elite, and genuinely proud of it. Underwater construction, salvage, and EOD support are your mission set. Commercial diving pays $100K+ and the military training is internationally recognized. This is one of the most physically demanding and financially rewarding specialties the Army offers.”
You will spend a significant portion of your career in water that smells like diesel, livestock, or the specific geological shame of whatever river you've been told to assess at 0300. The Army Combat Diver Qualification Course has a dropout rate that will humble people who thought they were tough, and that's just the beginning. In garrison you'll do equipment maintenance on gear that costs more than your car and gets treated with the institutional care of a Fort Bragg port-a-john. 'Underwater construction' means you're doing construction, but wet, which is worse. The salvage work is genuinely interesting until you discover what you're salvaging and what it smells like after three weeks submerged. Your knees, ears, and sinuses will all file separate claims. The dive community is small, close, and genuinely competent — the people are the reason most divers stay. That and the fact that you've invested too much cartilage to quit now.
What this actually is in the real world
Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job.
Commercial Divers
Strong matchNo reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience.
Write a Review