Skip to main content
HonestMOS
InvestigationsCongress made VA disability claims free to file. An entire industry charges veterans anyway — and nobody can stop them.
MOS COMPARISON

68A vs 65C

Biomedical Equipment Specialist (USA) vs Dietitian (USA)

Intel

Same Army, same hooah, same conviction that the other MOS has it easier. This belief is load-bearing and must never be tested.

The 68A's TAPS brief goes like this: "I spent four years doing — " 'Biomedical equipment specialist' means you're an electronics technician, a mechanical engineer, and an IT support specialist who works on things that cost more than houses and that people's lives depend on. The 65C's version: "My experience included — " commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation. The transition counselor treats both with the same encouraging nod, which is either reassuring or deeply noncommittal. The job fair after separation will go differently for these two. One will have lines at their booth. The other will have questions.

68AArmy
Biomedical Equipment Specialist
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$64K
65CArmy
Dietitian
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$70K
Head to Head
68A
65C
Getting In
ASVAB Line Scores
EL 107ST 107
NOTE Officers qualify via commissioning source (OCS/ROTC/USMA), not ASVAB line scores
Clearance
None
Pay Grade
Enlisted
Officer
Enlistment Bonus
Up to $15,000
Training
Training Length
24 wk
8 wk
Pipeline Type
BCT
Master of Occupational Therapy (MOT)
Training Location
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Day-to-Day
Promotion Speed
Average
Deployment Tempo
Low
Career Field
Medical
Medical
After You Get Out
Civilian Median Pay
$64K
$70K
Top Civilian Career
Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technologists and Technicians
Dietitians and Nutritionists
Credentials Earned
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.

68ABiomedical Equipment Specialist
Civilian Median Pay
$64K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technologists and TechniciansStrong
Job market: Average (2%)
$64K
Medical Equipment RepairersStrong
Medical and Health Services ManagersRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (28%)
$111K
Medical and Clinical Laboratory TechnologistsRelated
Job market: Faster than average (11%)
$61K
Credentials You Walk Away With
CBET (Certified Biomedical Equipment Technician)Electronics certificationsVarious manufacturer-specific equipment certifications
65CDietitian
Civilian Median Pay
$70K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Dietitians and NutritionistsStrong
Job market: Faster than average (7%)
$70K
Dietitians and NutritionistsStrong
Community Health WorkersRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (14%)
$49K
Medical and Health Services ManagersRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (28%)
$111K

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.

68ABiomedical Equipment Specialist
What the Recruiter Says

As a Biomedical Equipment Specialist, you'll maintain and repair the Army's advanced medical technology. You'll master medical device calibration, electrical systems, and preventive maintenance — earning skills that command $70,000+ starting salaries in hospital systems and medical device companies.

What It's Actually Like

You fix the medical equipment that fixes people, which makes you the most important person in the hospital that nobody has ever heard of. 'Biomedical equipment specialist' means you're an electronics technician, a mechanical engineer, and an IT support specialist who works on things that cost more than houses and that people's lives depend on. When the ventilator goes down, you're the one who gets called. When the X-ray machine produces nothing but static, you're the one who gets blamed. Your civilian career leads to hospital maintenance departments and medical device companies that will pay you very well to do exactly what the Army trained you to do, minus the formations. It's a hidden gem MOS that nobody talks about and everybody needs.

65CDietitian
What the Recruiter Says

You will be the Army's expert on fueling the force — the officer who ensures soldiers eat right, perform at their peak, and recover from injury or illness through evidence-based nutrition. You'll run clinical nutrition programs at military treatment facilities, counsel patients on therapeutic diets, advise commanders on unit feeding and operational rations, and manage nutrition services in the field. Your RD credential carries real clinical weight, and the Army gives you the rank and authority to act on it across a wide patient population.

What It's Actually Like

Army dietitians live in two worlds: the MTF clinic and the field, and neither one is quite what you pictured in your RD training. In the clinic, you're managing therapeutic nutrition for a patient panel that includes everything from eating disorder cases to post-surgical recovery to soldiers with diabetes who can't stop eating at the DFAC. Commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation. Deployed, you're advising on ration planning, water quality, and preventing the GI illness that will sideline more troops than the enemy. Your RD credential is required to commission, so you're already credentialed before you arrive. The challenge is practicing evidence-based nutrition inside an institution that has strong opinions about what soldiers should eat and not always great infrastructure to deliver it.

The Real Life

Same dimensions, side by side. 68A on the left, 65C on the right.

Daily Life
68A

Inspecting, maintaining, calibrating, and repairing biomedical equipment — everything from patient monitors and ventilators to X-ray machines and surgical instruments. You are the person who keeps the hospital running from an equipment standpoint. The work is highly technical and requires understanding both electronics and medical terminology.

65C

Training / School
68A

AIT at Fort Sam Houston (TX) is about 52 weeks — one of the longest AITs in the Army. Covers electronics, medical equipment theory, troubleshooting, calibration, and repair. The training is essentially a compressed associate's degree in biomedical equipment technology.

65C

Physical Demands
68A

Low. Lab and clinical work maintaining and repairing medical equipment. Standard Army PT requirements.

65C

Where You'll Be Stationed
68A
Fort Sam Houston (TX)Walter Reed (MD)Fort Liberty (NC)Fort Cavazos (TX)Any installation with a hospital or clinic
65C
The Honest Truth
68A

Biomedical equipment specialist is one of the Army's best-kept secrets for civilian career translation. The recruiter might not even know what this MOS does, but it produces highly trained technicians who maintain some of the most sophisticated equipment in healthcare. The 52-week AIT is essentially a free technical education that would cost $30K+ in the civilian world. What they won't tell you: the Army may not always utilize your skills optimally — some 68As end up doing general medical tasks or maintenance work unrelated to their specialty. The civilian market, however, values your skills enormously. Hospitals, medical device manufacturers (GE Healthcare, Philips, Siemens), and third-party service companies all hire BMETs aggressively. This is a niche MOS with a strong ceiling if you pursue certifications.

65C

Recent Reviews

68A
No reviews yet. Be the first to review 68A.
65C
No reviews yet. Be the first to review 65C.

Community Takes

Be the first to share your take on 68A vs 65C

Compare Other MOS

Search by code or title, or browse by branch

vs
68A vs 65C: Which MOS Wins? Reviews 2026