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MOS COMPARISON

68V vs 65C

Respiratory Specialist (USA) vs Dietitian (USA)

Intel

Two soldiers walk into a motor pool. One works there. The other just needs their vehicle back. Both are trapped for the next 4 hours.

Plot the entire military career spectrum on a line. Put 68V here: certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT) and Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) credentialing through NBRC are the civilian pathways, and your Army clinical experience provides the foundation. Put 65C here: commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation. The distance between these two points is the reason "military experience" is an insufficient descriptor. Same veteran status, different levels of "so what do you actually do?" at every holiday gathering until death.

68VArmy
Respiratory Specialist
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$78K
65CArmy
Dietitian
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$70K
Head to Head
68V
65C
Getting In
ASVAB Line Scores
ST 107
NOTE Officers qualify via commissioning source (OCS/ROTC/USMA), not ASVAB line scores
Pay Grade
Enlisted
Officer
Training
Training Length
20 wk
8 wk
Pipeline Type
Basic Combat Training
Master of Occupational Therapy (MOT)
Training Location
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Day-to-Day
Career Field
Medical
Medical
After You Get Out
Civilian Median Pay
$78K
$70K
Top Civilian Career
Respiratory Therapists
Dietitians and Nutritionists

After the Uniform

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

68VRespiratory Specialist
Civilian Median Pay
$78K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Respiratory TherapistsStrong
Job market: Much faster than average (13%)
$78K
Health Technologists and TechniciansStrong
Registered NursesRelated
Job market: Faster than average (6%)
$86K
Emergency Medical Technicians and ParamedicsRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (14%)
$40K
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.

68VRespiratory Specialist
What the Recruiter Says

Provide respiratory therapy to injured and ill soldiers in Army medical facilities. Operate mechanical ventilators, perform pulmonary function testing, and support critical care teams. Work in Army hospitals with advanced respiratory technology. Strong civilian certification pathway in a high-demand allied health specialty.

What It's Actually Like

You work in Army hospital respiratory therapy departments: mechanical ventilator management, oxygen therapy, nebulizer treatments, pulmonary function testing, arterial blood gas collection, airway management assistance — the full scope of respiratory care under the supervision of physicians and in collaboration with nursing and critical care teams. The ICU component is where the work gets both the most demanding and the most meaningful: a ventilated patient in the ICU is one where respiratory care is not a supporting role but a primary one. The Army's critical care hospitals give you exposure to complex patients at a level that most new respiratory therapists don't see until they've been working for years. Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT) and Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) credentialing through NBRC are the civilian pathways, and your Army clinical experience provides the foundation. Hospital respiratory departments are consistently short-staffed — the profession is in perpetual demand relative to the number of people who know it exists. ICU-experienced respiratory therapists make competitive salaries. Travel respiratory therapist positions, which pay significantly above standard rates, are particularly accessible to people with Army critical care background. The work is technically demanding and genuinely life-critical in ways that keep practitioners engaged across a career.

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.

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