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MOS COMPARISON

11H vs 13S

Helicopter Pilot (USAF) vs Space Operations Officer (USAF)

Intel

Same Air Force, same generally civilized existence — surprisingly different jobs behind the "Aim High" bumper sticker.

When a 11H and a 13S both hit terminal leave in the same month, the job market receives two very different veterans. The 11H brings: the airlines recruit you aggressively, and helicopter EMS and offshore operators pay extremely well. The 13S arrives with: your satellite operations experience and command authority over high-value national assets translate to program offices, ground systems operations, and commercial satellite operator positions that find the specific expertise genuinely useful. Both earned their DD-214. The civilian world values them at different exchange rates. Same flag, same anthem, same inexplicable attachment to a career that doesn't always love them back.

11HAir Force
Helicopter Pilot
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$135K
13SAir Force
Space Operations Officer
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$103K
Head to Head
11H
13S
Getting In
ASVAB Line Scores
NOTE Officers qualify via AFOQT (Air Force Officer Qualifying Test), not ASVAB line scores
NOTE Officers qualify via AFOQT (Air Force Officer Qualifying Test), not ASVAB line scores
Clearance
Secret
TS/SCI
Pay Grade
Officer
Officer
Training
Training Length
52 wk
16 wk
Pipeline Type
OTS or USAFA
OTS or USAFA
Training Location
Fort Novosel, AL (joint rotary wing training) then HH-60 FTU at Kirtland AFB, NM
Vandenberg SFB, CA
Day-to-Day
Promotion Speed
Slow
Fast
Deployment Tempo
High
Low
Career Field
Rated Operations
Space Operations
After You Get Out
Civilian Median Pay
$135K
$103K
Top Civilian Career
Commercial Pilots
Mathematical Science Occupations
Credentials Earned
4 certs
3 certs

After the Uniform

The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.

11HHelicopter Pilot
Civilian Median Pay
$135K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Commercial PilotsStrong
Job market: Much faster than average (11%)
$135K
Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight EngineersRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (11%)
$239K
Vocational Education Teachers, PostsecondaryRelated
Job market: Average (2%)
$59K
Credentials You Walk Away With
Pilot wingsHelicopter/tilt-rotor qualificationNVG qualificationInstrument rating
13SSpace Operations Officer
Civilian Median Pay
$103K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Mathematical Science OccupationsStrong
Job market: Faster than average (9%)
$103K
Computer Systems AnalystsRelated
Job market: Faster than average (11%)
$104K
Electrical EngineersRelated
Job market: Average (9%)
$108K
Credentials You Walk Away With
Space Operations qualificationCrew certificationsVarious classified system qualifications

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.

11HHelicopter Pilot
What the Recruiter Says

As a Helicopter Pilot, you'll fly combat search and rescue, special operations support, and VIP transport missions aboard the HH-60 Pave Hawk and UH-1N Huey. You'll execute some of the most demanding low-level flying in the Air Force, directly saving lives and supporting special operators in austere environments worldwide.

What It's Actually Like

You fly helicopters into places that don't exist on maps to drop off people who don't exist on paper. It's genuinely the most exciting flying in the Air Force — CSAR, special operations support, VIP transport, and the occasional mission that generates a classified award you can't wear on your uniform. Your aircraft (the HH-60 Pave Hawk or CV-22 Osprey) will try to kill you through mechanical complexity alone. Helicopter maintenance is measured in hours-per-flight-hour and the ratio is depressing. You'll fly NOE (nap of the earth) at night with NVGs strapped to your face, trusting terrain-following radar built by the lowest bidder. Pre-mission planning takes longer than the mission. Post-mission debrief takes longer than planning. You will be in incredible physical shape because rescue swimmers don't save themselves and your PJs expect a pilot who can keep up. The rescue community is the tightest brotherhood in the Air Force. When you pull someone out of a bad situation, there is no better feeling in military aviation. Zero. The airlines recruit you aggressively, and helicopter EMS and offshore operators pay extremely well.

13SSpace Operations Officer
What the Recruiter Says

You'll lead space operations supporting military satellite systems, missile warning, and space situational awareness — at the forefront of America's most strategic domain.

What It's Actually Like

You'll operate military satellites from ground control stations — commanding assets that the entire joint force depends on but rarely thinks about until they degrade. The Space Force's transition from Air Force has created a career field in genuine institutional flux: culture, promotion pathways, and mission focus are all evolving simultaneously. The 'Space Force' identity is still being built and if you joined early you have the specific experience of helping construct something from scratch, which is either exciting or unsettling depending on the day. The commercial satellite industry and the defense space contractor community actively recruit this background. Your satellite operations experience and command authority over high-value national assets translate to program offices, ground systems operations, and commercial satellite operator positions that find the specific expertise genuinely useful.

The Real Life

Same dimensions, side by side. 11H on the left, 13S on the right.

Daily Life
11H

Flying training sorties, NVG operations, formation flying, special operations support, and search and rescue. AFSOC helicopter pilots (HH-60, CV-22) have the most intense flying. The mission set is diverse: personnel recovery, special operations insertion/extraction, and combat search and rescue.

13S

Managing space operations — satellite command and control, space surveillance, missile warning, and GPS operations. You command and control the nation's most critical space assets.

Training / School
11H

UPT followed by helicopter-specific training (or tilt-rotor for CV-22). The helicopter pipeline is shorter than fighters but the NVG and tactical flying training is demanding. Total pipeline is about 2 years from commissioning to mission-ready.

13S

Undergraduate Space Training at Vandenberg SFB (CA) about 5 months covering orbital mechanics, space operations, and system-specific training. Heavy on physics and engineering.

Physical Demands
11H

Moderate. Helicopter flying requires physical coordination and endurance, especially during low-level and night vision goggle operations. Less G-stress than fighters.

13S

Low. Operations center and office work.

Where You'll Be Stationed
11H
Kirtland AFB (NM)Hurlburt Field (FL)JBER (AK)Yokota AB (Japan)Various AFSOC locations
13S
Vandenberg SFB (CA)Schriever SFB (CO)Peterson SFB (CO)Buckley SFB (CO)Cape Canaveral SFS (FL)
The Honest Truth
11H

Helicopter pilot is the overlooked sibling in the Air Force pilot community — fighters get the glory, heavies get the airline path, and helicopter pilots get the most operationally intense missions. The recruiter will probably try to steer you toward fixed-wing, but if you actively choose helicopters, you enter a community that does some of the Air Force's most demanding flying: combat search and rescue, special operations insertion, and NVG low-level in hostile territory. The honest trade-off: helicopter pilots promote slower than fixed-wing peers, the airline transition is less direct (though EMS and corporate rotary pay well), and the community is small. The operational satisfaction, however, is hard to match. If you want to fly missions that matter more than careers, helicopters deliver.

13S

Space Operations Officer is among the most future-proof careers in the military. You command and control satellites providing GPS, missile warning, communications, and intelligence to the entire joint force. Duty stations are excellent (Colorado Springs, Vandenberg, Patrick). The honest truth: much of the day-to-day is shift work in operations centers. But the strategic importance is growing exponentially as space becomes contested. The commercial space industry is booming and actively recruiting — the post-military outlook is outstanding.

Recent Reviews

11H
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