0306 vs 1361
Infantry Weapons Officer (USMC) vs Engineer Assistant (USMC)
Two Marines in the chow hall: one smells like the field, the other like hydraulic fluid. Both think they have it worse. Both are right.
If both of these MOS codes had to write an honest shift report, the 0306's would read: some Gunners are integrated into planning from the start; others spend their time at the range running qualification courses because that's what the command defaults to. And the 1361's would read: equipment readiness meetings, parts accountability, operator licensing, and the annual equipment inspection are the landmarks of your professional calendar. Same form, different ink, completely different energy. Same military. Same rank structure. Same level of confusion when either tries to explain their job at Thanksgiving.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“The Marine Gunner is the battalion's walking weapons encyclopedia — the Chief Warrant Officer who knows every infantry weapons system in the inventory cold. Machine guns, mortars, rockets, anti-armor, breaching equipment: the Gunner advises the battalion commander on how to employ all of it with maximum effect. This is not a command billet — it's a technical authority billet. When the battalion needs to know whether to use a SMAW or an AT4, what mortar registration looks like in an urban canyon, or how to set up an FPL, the Gunner is who they ask. If you have years of infantry experience and want to spend your warrant officer career being the unit's deepest tactical expert, this is the path.”
The Gunner is respected but can also be underutilized — your value depends entirely on whether the battalion commander and S3 know how to use you. Some Gunners are integrated into planning from the start; others spend their time at the range running qualification courses because that's what the command defaults to. You are an advisor, not a commander — influence without authority can be frustrating when you see tactical decisions made poorly. The warrant officer track in the Marines is narrower than the Army's; promotion opportunities and follow-on billet options are limited. On the upside: if you find a good battalion, the Gunner billet is one of the most intellectually satisfying in the infantry — you get to be the person who actually knows how all the weapons work and why.
“As the engineer equipment warrant officer, you're the subject matter expert on the heavy equipment that the Marine Corps uses to build, breach, and clear — from D9 bulldozers to rough terrain cranes. You'll manage equipment programs worth millions of dollars and advise commanders on what engineer equipment can actually accomplish versus what the PowerPoint says it can. The equipment management and technical leadership experience translates directly to civilian heavy construction and equipment management careers.”
You will manage a fleet of large, expensive machines that the Marine Corps uses hard and maintains less thoroughly than the manufacturer would prefer. Equipment readiness meetings, parts accountability, operator licensing, and the annual equipment inspection are the landmarks of your professional calendar. The technical depth you build — knowing what each piece of equipment can do, what it costs to keep running, and how to employ it to maximum effect — is genuinely valuable. Heavy construction companies, DOT contractors, and mining operations all understand what a former Marine engineer equipment officer did, and the combined technical and leadership background makes you competitive for operations management roles in those industries.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 0306 on the left, 1361 on the right.
Advising commanders on weapons employment, running ranges, managing arms rooms, overseeing marksmanship programs, and serving as the resident expert on everything from M4s to TOW missiles. You are the battalion or regiment's weapons guru and maintenance authority. Administrative duties include armory management and accountability.
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Warrant Officer Basic Course at Quantico, followed by specialized weapons training. The pathway to WO in the infantry community requires extensive enlisted experience — most 0306s were senior SNCOs before selection. The WO culture is distinct: you are a technical expert, not a commander.
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High. You are expected to maintain infantry-level fitness while serving as the technical expert on all infantry weapons systems. Field time is substantial.
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The 0306 Infantry Weapons Officer is one of the most respected warrant officer billets in the Marine Corps. You are the subject matter expert that battalion commanders rely on for everything weapons-related. The path to get here is long — years of enlisted infantry experience — but the payoff is a stable career doing what you love without the command burden of commissioned officers. The recruiter doesn't recruit for this MOS; it finds you. Civilian translation is strong in the firearms industry, defense contracting, and law enforcement training. The downside: warrant officer promotions are slow, and the billet structure limits where you can be assigned.
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