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MOS COMPARISON

1320 vs AW

Naval Flight Officer (USN) vs Naval Aircrewman (USN)

Intel

Same ship, different decks, shared conviction that the other rate figured out the Navy's cheat code. Nobody has.

Two veterans at a bar. The 1320 says: "Your training pipeline is just as demanding as a pilot's — you survive the same carrier qualifications, pull the same G-forces, and spend the same years at Pensacola." The AW responds: "The physiological demands are real — hypoxia training, dunker training (water egress from an inverted simulated helicopter), altitude chamber." They clink glasses. Neither fully understands what the other one just said. Both nod like they do. Two veterans at a job fair, and one has four times more recruiters approaching them. Not the military kind of recruiter this time.

1320Navy
Naval Flight Officer
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$135K
AWNavy
Naval Aircrewman
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$135K
Head to Head
1320
AW
Getting In
ASVAB Line Scores
NOTE Officers qualify via OAR/ASTB (Aviation Selection Test Battery), not ASVAB line scores
VE_AR_MK_GS 210
Clearance
Secret
Pay Grade
Officer
Enlisted
Enlistment Bonus
Up to $35,000 (aviation bonus)
Training
Training Length
44 wk
10 wk
Pipeline Type
OCS or USNA
Boot Camp
Training Location
NAS Pensacola, FL
NATTC Pensacola, FL
Day-to-Day
Promotion Speed
Fast
Deployment Tempo
High
Career Field
Aviation
Aviation
After You Get Out
Civilian Median Pay
$135K
$135K
Top Civilian Career
Commercial Pilots
Commercial Pilots
Credentials Earned
4 certs

After the Uniform

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

1320Naval Flight Officer
Civilian Median Pay
$135K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Commercial PilotsRelated
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, PostsecondaryStretch
Job market: Average (2%)
$59K
Credentials You Walk Away With
Naval Flight Officer wingsCarrier qualification (carrier-based)Various aircraft and weapons system qualificationsTOPGUN graduate (select F/A-18F WSOs)
AWNaval Aircrewman
Civilian Median Pay
$135K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Commercial PilotsRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (11%)
$135K
Aircraft Mechanics and Service TechniciansRelated
Job market: Faster than average (6%)
$75K
Occupational Health and Safety SpecialistsRelated
Job market: Average (5%)
$81K

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.

1320Naval Flight Officer
What the Recruiter Says

As a Naval Flight Officer, you'll master the tactical systems that turn aircraft into weapons platforms — operating radar, weapons systems, and electronic warfare suites in the backseat of the Navy's most advanced aircraft. From E-2 Hawkeyes to EA-18G Growlers, NFOs are the tactical brains of naval aviation, directing the fight from the air.

What It's Actually Like

You are a Naval Flight Officer, the person who sits behind the pilot and makes the aircraft actually useful in combat. Pilots fly the plane. You fight it. In an F/A-18F Super Hornet, you're the Weapon Systems Officer running the radar, managing weapons, and talking to everyone on the radio while the pilot handles the stick and throttle. In a P-8 Poseidon, you're hunting submarines with sonobuoys and MAD equipment. In an E-2 Hawkeye, you're the airborne battle manager controlling the entire airspace. Your training pipeline is just as demanding as a pilot's — you survive the same carrier qualifications, pull the same G-forces, and spend the same years at Pensacola. But you'll never introduce yourself at a bar and hear 'oh cool, a Naval Flight Officer' because nobody outside the Navy knows what that means. Every NFO develops the specific frustration of being equally skilled, equally trained, and equally necessary as the pilot while receiving approximately 10% of the cultural recognition. The flying is genuinely incredible. Carrier traps at night are the most demanding thing in aviation and you're doing them regularly. Civilian airlines don't need NFOs, but defense contractors, intelligence agencies, and aviation management positions value your tactical expertise at $100-150K.

AWNaval Aircrewman
What the Recruiter Says

You'll fly every mission your aircraft flies — operating sonar buoys, rescue hoists, and mission sensors that the pilots physically cannot reach from the cockpit. Naval aircrewmen serve on H-60 Seahawks, P-8 Poseidons, and other platforms conducting the missions that matter most: pulling people out of the water alive, hunting submarines, and collecting intelligence in contested environments. The AW qualification pipeline is selective and the flight hours are real. Commercial helicopter operators, maritime patrol contractors, and special operations aviation support companies recruit from this community specifically because the combination of flight experience and mission system expertise is rare.

What It's Actually Like

AW is not one job — it is a community of people who fly in the back of naval aircraft doing completely different things depending on their platform. On an MH-60S you might be a rescue swimmer lowering yourself into a Beaufort 6 sea state to pull someone off a sinking vessel. On a P-8A Poseidon you are running acoustic sensor systems and processing sonobuoy data to track a submarine that may or may not know you are there. On an E-2D Hawkeye you are running the most powerful airborne battle management radar in naval aviation for six hours at a time in a tiny tube that smells like recycled stress. The physiological demands are real — hypoxia training, dunker training (water egress from an inverted simulated helicopter), altitude chamber. The sea stories are the best in naval aviation because you were actually there, in the aircraft, watching it happen. Shore rotations exist but the community is small enough that everybody knows everybody. What you did is specific, skilled, and impressive, and the civilian world will take a while to figure out what to do with it.

The Real Life

Same dimensions, side by side. 1320 on the left, AW on the right.

Daily Life
1320

Operating aircraft weapons and sensor systems as the tactical operator in the cockpit. F/A-18F WSOs (Weapons Systems Officers) manage radar, targeting, and weapons employment. EA-18G ECMOs (Electronic Countermeasures Officers) conduct electronic attack. E-2C/D NFOs manage airborne early warning and control. P-8A NFOs operate maritime patrol sensors. The NFO is the tactical brain of the aircrew.

AW

Training / School
1320

Flight training at Pensacola (FL) follows a similar initial pipeline as Naval Aviators — API, then primary navigation training, then advanced training in your specific aircraft. Total pipeline: 12-18 months (shorter than pilot pipeline). NFO training emphasizes tactical systems, radar operations, and sensor management rather than stick-and-rudder flying.

AW

Physical Demands
1320

Moderate. Same flight physical requirements as pilots. G-forces in tactical jets (especially F/A-18F back seat and EA-18G) are equivalent to pilot exposure.

AW

Where You'll Be Stationed
1320
Pensacola (FL)Various Naval Air Stations (NAS Oceana, NAS Jacksonville, NAS Whidbey Island)Carrier Air Wings worldwide
AW
The Honest Truth
1320

Naval Flight Officer is the tactical systems operator of naval aviation, and the role is significantly more important than most people realize. The recruiter may position NFO as "not quite a pilot" — that framing is wrong. In an F/A-18F, the WSO manages targeting, weapons, and sensors. In an EA-18G, the ECMO conducts electronic warfare that protects the entire strike group. In an E-2D, the NFO controls the airspace for an entire carrier battle group. These are immensely consequential roles. What they won't tell you: there's a persistent (and undeserved) stigma of being "the guy in the back seat." Some pilots will make jokes. Rise above it — your tactical competence speaks for itself. The career path is strong: command opportunities exist, and the civilian transition is excellent. EW-trained NFOs are in extreme demand at defense contractors ($130K-180K+). The lifestyle demands are identical to Naval Aviators — deployments, time away from family, and the physical toll of carrier aviation. A genuinely elite career path that deserves more recognition.

AW

Recent Reviews

1320
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