25B vs 68K
Information Technology Specialist (USA) vs Medical Laboratory Specialist (USA)
Same DFAC, same 0630 formation, same NCO who's been "about to retire" for six years — completely different jobs behind the camo.
0630. Two service members. Same PT formation. Then the 25B goes here: you will also fix the commander's personal iPad, explain why the printer is offline (it's always the printer), and be personally blamed for network outages caused by an ISP you don't control. And the 68K goes here: the civilian pathway from 68K is one of the more direct medical MOS transitions: Medical Laboratory Technician (MLT) certification through ASCP is achievable with your Army training and experience. They'll meet again at the PX. Neither will understand what the other did all day. Somewhere in MEPS, someone is choosing between these two right now. We hope they found this page first.
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.
Some figures are estimated from the closest civilian equivalent and may not reflect actual compensation.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“As an Information Technology Specialist, you'll be at the forefront of the Army's cyber mission. You'll manage cutting-edge network systems, earn industry certifications like Security+, and launch a six-figure career in cybersecurity or IT management.”
You will reset passwords. A genuinely stunning number of passwords. You will also fix the commander's personal iPad, explain why the printer is offline (it's always the printer), and be personally blamed for network outages caused by an ISP you don't control. Your actual technical growth depends entirely on your unit: a handful of 25Bs end up doing legitimate network engineering or supporting actual SOC operations. Most spend three years as glorified help desk for a battalion TOC and a colonel who replies-all to everything. Get the certs — Security+, CCNA, eventually CISSP. The Army will not make it easy to study for them, so do it anyway. The clearance plus the certs plus the operational experience opens real doors. Just know that "Army IT expert" means something very different at Fort Liberty than it does at NSA Georgia.
“Perform clinical laboratory procedures supporting medical diagnosis and treatment. Work with advanced laboratory equipment in Army medical facilities. Develop medical laboratory skills with direct civilian certification pathways. One of the most technical and intellectually engaging Army medical specialties.”
You run laboratory procedures — hematology, chemistry, urinalysis, microbiology, blood banking — in Army clinical laboratories that support patient care. The technical skill requirement is real: laboratory science involves precision instrument operation, quality control procedures, result interpretation, and an understanding of what the numbers mean in a clinical context. You will perform a CBC, a chemistry panel, or a blood culture and produce a result that a clinician uses to make a treatment decision. That chain of responsibility is the professional standard that the lab culture is built around. Army clinical labs at medical centers are staffed well enough to provide genuine training, and the patient volume at larger installations provides case diversity. The civilian pathway from 68K is one of the more direct medical MOS transitions: Medical Laboratory Technician (MLT) certification through ASCP is achievable with your Army training and experience. The civilian laboratory field — hospital labs, reference labs, public health labs — has consistent demand and reasonable pay. A subset of 68K soldiers use the foundation to pursue Medical Laboratory Scientist (MLS) degrees and advance into supervisory or research laboratory roles. The intellectual engagement of clinical laboratory work stays consistent regardless of setting.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 25B on the left, 68K on the right.
Help desk tickets, network troubleshooting, server maintenance, and imaging workstations. You will reset more passwords than you can count. Some units let 25Bs do real sysadmin work; others treat you as a cable monkey. Your experience depends heavily on your unit.
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AIT at Fort Eisenhower (GA) is about 20 weeks. Covers CompTIA A+, Network+, and Security+ material. The pace is manageable and you'll have weekends off after the first phase. Barracks life is decent compared to combat MOS training.
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Low to moderate. Standard Army PT and occasional field exercises setting up tactical comms, but most work is in server rooms and help desks.
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This is one of the best MOSs for post-military career prospects. The Army will give you certifications that civilian IT workers pay thousands for, and the security clearance alone is worth six figures in the DC job market. The catch: your actual Army experience varies wildly. Some 25Bs work on enterprise networks alongside contractors and learn real skills. Others spend four years resetting passwords and running cable. Push hard for good assignments and never stop self-studying — the MOS gives you the platform, but you have to build on it yourself.
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