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Carpentry and Masonry Specialist

Constructs and repairs wooden and masonry structures on military installations. Builds barracks, bridges, fighting positions, and field fortifications using wood, concrete block, and similar materials.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

You'll do real construction work — rough framing, finish carpentry, concrete formwork, concrete block, and masonry on military facilities and field structures. The United Brotherhood of Carpenters recognizes military construction experience for apprenticeship credit, and licensed carpenters earn $60-85K in most markets. Residential and commercial construction contractors actively hire veterans with documented work history. If you can frame a building, lay block, and finish a floor, you have skills the construction industry can't find enough of — and the Army will make sure you actually have them.

What it's actually like

You will build things and you will tear things down and sometimes you will build the same thing twice because the first plan changed and nobody updated the OPORD. Carpentry work in the Army ranges from actual skilled framing and finish work on real facilities to 'build a platform for the colonel to stand on for the change of command' with 48 hours notice and lumber from the engineer yard that has been outside since the Clinton administration. The masonry side is physically brutal — block and mortar in summer heat is a particular kind of suffering that bonds the people who do it. Your tools are mostly adequate. Your PPE is consistently on order. The civilian construction pathway is genuine and direct: residential contractors, commercial construction firms, union carpenters all hire veterans with documented trade experience. Some states will credit your service toward apprenticeship hours. Your ability to build something functional under adverse conditions with imperfect materials is a skill civilian contractors find remarkable and that you will undervalue for years after you get out.

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Training Pipeline
1
Basic Combat Training10w
Various
2
AIT — Carpentry and Masonry Specialist9w
Fort Leonard Wood (MO)
Rough/finish carpentry, concrete forming, masonry, temporary and semi-permanent construction in field environments.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

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

Carpenters

Strong match
Salary data coming soon
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