1130 vs 3100
Special Warfare Officer (USN) vs Supply Corps Officer (USN)
Two rates that pass each other in the P-way daily and have zero comprehension of what the other one does for 12 hours.
"So what was your MOS?" asks one vet to another at the VFW. The 1130 answers: what they don't show you is the 15 years after BUD/S: the training cycles, the deployments, the toll on your body, your mind, and every relationship you try to maintain from the other side of the world. The 3100 follows with: you will fight NAVSUP, fight DFAS, and fight the CO's expectations — all simultaneously — with a spreadsheet and a prayer. The bartender, a civilian, understands none of it and pours another round anyway. The VA treats both of these the same. The civilian job market does not.
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.
“As a Special Warfare Officer, you'll lead Navy SEAL platoons in the most demanding special operations missions on the planet — direct action, special reconnaissance, and counterterrorism across every domain. You'll graduate from BUD/S and earn your Trident alongside your enlisted teammates, forging the warrior-leader archetype that defines Naval Special Warfare.”
You are a Special Warfare Officer — a Navy SEAL — and you already know what this is because every book, movie, and podcast for the last 20 years has told you. BUD/S is real. The washout rate is real. The cold is real. The sand is real. What they don't show you is the 15 years after BUD/S: the training cycles, the deployments, the toll on your body, your mind, and every relationship you try to maintain from the other side of the world. Your operational skills are genuinely elite. Your celebrity is a double-edged sword the community is still learning to navigate. The guys who do this job right never write a book about it. They just keep showing up.
“As a Supply Corps Officer, you'll manage the logistics and financial operations that keep the Navy running — from fleet logistics and contract management to food service and fuel operations. The Supply Corps produces more Fortune 500 CEOs than any other military community, and your MBA-equivalent experience in supply chain, finance, and leadership will make you extraordinarily competitive in the corporate world.”
You are a Supply Corps Officer, which means you are the reason the ship has food, fuel, parts, and toilet paper — and the crew will only notice your existence when one of those runs out. You manage the logistics that keep a warship operational, which sounds administrative until you realize a destroyer without spare parts is a very expensive kayak and a carrier without food is a mutiny waiting to happen. Your 'financial operations' involve managing budgets that would make a civilian CFO nervous using systems that would make a civilian CFO cry. You will fight NAVSUP, fight DFAS, and fight the CO's expectations — all simultaneously — with a spreadsheet and a prayer. Your galley crew's performance will be rated more passionately by the crew than any combat system readiness metric, because sailors can forgive a broken radar but will NEVER forgive bad midrats. The coffee supply is a strategic asset and running out is a career-ending event. You'll negotiate contracts, manage inventories, and explain to a three-star why the ship needs a part that costs $40,000 and has a 16-week lead time. Your MBA-equivalent training is real. Amazon, Walmart, and every Fortune 500 with a supply chain wants someone who's managed logistics for 5,000 people in the middle of the ocean.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 1130 on the left, 3100 on the right.
Leading SEAL platoons and task units in direct action, special reconnaissance, and unconventional warfare. Pre-deployment: training workups that are among the most realistic and intense in the military. Deployment: leading the most capable direct action force in the world. Between deployments: schools, advanced training, and staff tours.
Managing the Navy's supply chain and financial operations. On a ship: running the supply department (food service, ship's store, parts procurement, postal operations, financial management). Shore duty: fleet logistics centers, Defense Logistics Agency, comptroller positions, and contracting. Supply officers touch money, food, and parts — the three things sailors care most about.
BUD/S (Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL) at Coronado (CA) is 6+ months, followed by SQT (SEAL Qualification Training) and Junior Officer Training Course (JOTC). Total pipeline: 18+ months. Officer attrition at BUD/S is 75%+. You must earn the respect of the enlisted operators through demonstrated competence and resilience.
Basic Qualification Course (BQC) at Naval Supply Systems Command (NAVSUP) in Newport, RI is approximately 6 months. Covers supply chain management, financial management, food service management, and Navy procurement. The training is business-focused and prepares you for the immediate responsibility of managing a ship's supply department.
The most demanding physical pipeline for any officer in the US military. BUD/S, SQT, and the operational career that follows require elite physical conditioning sustained over decades.
Low. Supply and logistics management is office-based. Shipboard supply officers have the same physical environment as any officer on the ship.
Special Warfare Officer is the most elite and most scrutinized officer career in the Navy. Everything true about enlisted SEALs (SO) applies to SEAL officers, amplified by the burden of command. You are responsible for the lives and actions of the most capable warriors in the world. The recruiter will talk about the prestige and the pipeline — both are real. What gets downplayed: SEAL officers are leaders first, operators second. Your enlisted SEALs will be better than you at almost every tactical skill. Your value is decision-making, planning, and taking responsibility when things go wrong. The personal cost — on relationships, body, and psyche — is immense. The post-military career paths are extraordinary (corporate leadership, government, entrepreneurship), but they come after years of intense sacrifice. Command in the SEAL community is one of the most consequential leadership positions in the military. Go in to lead, not for the Trident.
Supply Corps Officer is the Navy's business professional, and it's a career that delivers exactly what it promises — logistics, financial management, and supply chain operations. The recruiter will talk about business management and leadership, and that's accurate. What they won't emphasize: your first sea duty tour as a Supply Officer on a ship means you're responsible for feeding 300+ sailors, managing a multi-million dollar budget, and procuring every part the ship needs — and you will be blamed for every bad meal and every missing repair part. The job is thankless when it goes right and very visible when it goes wrong. The civilian career translation is the primary selling point: Supply Corps alumni are heavily recruited by defense contractors, consulting firms, and Fortune 500 companies for supply chain, procurement, and financial management roles at $100-150K+. The career is stable, the quality of life is better than URL communities, and the business skills are genuinely transferable. Not exciting, but smart.
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