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USCGEM

Electrician's Mate

Maintains and repairs electrical power generation, distribution, and lighting systems aboard cutters and at shore facilities.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

As an Electrician's Mate, you'll master the electrical systems that power every Coast Guard cutter and shore station. You'll work with generators, motors, power distribution, and lighting systems — building a skillset that leads to high-paying careers as a licensed electrician, power plant operator, or electrical engineer.

What it's actually like

You fix the electrical systems on a vessel that is actively trying to corrode every wire, connector, and junction box you maintain. Salt water is the enemy of electricity and you work where they meet. Your job is to keep the lights on, the generators running, the navigation systems powered, and every electrical component aboard functional in an environment specifically designed to destroy them. A typical day includes troubleshooting generators, rewiring panels, maintaining shore power connections, and explaining to the non-rate why they can't plug a space heater into the same circuit as the radar. When a generator goes down at sea, you have minutes to diagnose and fix it because the ship's combat systems, navigation, and propulsion all depend on electrical power. Your troubleshooting skills become supernatural — you'll diagnose faults by sound, smell, and the specific way a breaker trips. You maintain 450V power distribution systems, emergency generators, and the increasingly complex electronic systems that modern cutters depend on. The licensing is real: your training maps to civilian journeyman electrician standards. Civilian transition leads to marine electrician roles, industrial electrical maintenance, power plant operations, and shore-based facilities paying $70-100K. Shipyards and commercial vessel operators specifically recruit Coast Guard EMs.

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MOS Intel

ClearanceNone
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PromotionAverage
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Deploy TempoModerate
Career Intel
Duty StationsCoast Guard Cutters · Shore-side engineering facilities · Sector commands · Coast Guard Yard (MD)
Daily LifeMaintaining electrical systems on cutters and at shore facilities — power generation, distribution, lighting, and electronics. You keep the ship's electrical grid running, from main generators to individual circuits.
AIT / SchoolA-school at Training Center Yorktown (VA) is about 16 weeks covering electrical theory, power generation, motor controls, and shipboard electrical systems.
Physical DemandsModerate. Electrical work on ships involves climbing, working in confined spaces, and exposure to shipboard hazards.
DeploymentsCutter deployments; shore-side engineering is garrison
Certifications
Electrical qualificationsVarious USCG electrical certificationsJourneyman electrician (with state requirements)
Pro Tips
  1. 1Marine electrician experience is specialized and well-compensated. Shipyards and maritime companies pay $55-85K+ for experienced EMs.
  2. 2Pursue your journeyman electrician license using military experience. Your A-school and sea time count toward state requirements in many jurisdictions.
  3. 3Industrial and marine electrical work commands higher pay than residential. Your shipboard experience puts you in the premium tier.
The Honest Truth

Electrician's Mate is genuine trade work on ships and shore facilities. The recruiter probably won't highlight EM, but the civilian electrical trade is one of the most in-demand and best-paying skilled trades in the country. What you learn in the Coast Guard — power generation, motor controls, shipboard electrical systems — translates directly to marine, industrial, and commercial electrical careers. The sea duty rotation means time on cutters in challenging conditions, but the skills are permanently valuable.

Training Pipeline
1
Basic Training8w
Cape May (NJ)
2
EM "A" School26w
Yorktown (VA)
Electrical systems, ship power distribution, electronics, AC/DC theory.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

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

Electrical and Electronics Installers and Repairers, Transportation Equipment

Strong match
Salary data coming soon
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