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USA12R

Interior Electrician

Installs, maintains, and repairs interior electrical systems in military facilities. Works on wiring, circuit breakers, outlets, and lighting systems across all types of buildings and structures on military installations.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

You'll learn to wire buildings — from rough-in to finish, from panel installation to troubleshooting. The Army trains you to a standard that the IBEW recognizes, and journeyman electricians are in shortage across the country. Licensed electricians in most markets start at $65-85K and supervisory roles push past six figures. Some IBEW locals count military electrical time toward apprenticeship hours, which compresses your timeline to the journeyman card. If you're looking for an enlisted MOS that gives you a legitimate skilled trade ticket when you get out, this is one of the most reliable bets in the Army.

What it's actually like

You are an electrician, which means everyone knows you until the power works and then nobody knows you exist. Your projects will range from wiring a new company operations center to 'why does this outlet spark when we plug something in' in a building that was constructed during a previous geopolitical era. The work is genuinely skilled — conduit bending, panel installation, load calculations, NEC code compliance — and the Army will occasionally let you use those skills between the stretches of fatigue duty that have nothing to do with electricity. Your civilian translation is exceptionally clear: electricians are perpetually in demand, apprenticeship programs will credit your time, and journeyman electricians in most markets make more than O-3s. The job site hazards are real and the Army's lockout/tagout culture is inconsistent in ways that should be more alarming than they are. You will develop opinions about wire gauges and breaker boxes that your family finds unnecessary. They are not unnecessary.

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Training Pipeline
1
Basic Combat Training10w
Various
2
AIT — Interior Electrician13w
Fort Leonard Wood (MO)
Interior wiring, panels, electrical systems for military facilities. Includes OSHA safety certification.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job.

Electricians

Strong match
Salary data coming soon
Reviews

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