Is 1810 (Engineering Duty Officer) a Good Rating?
United States Navy · Navy Rating
Quick Facts — 1810 (Engineering Duty Officer)
AIT / Training
12 weeks
Training Location
Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA
Career Field
Engineering
Verdict: Not enough data
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Score Breakdown
About 1810 Engineering Duty Officer
Manages the design, construction, maintenance, and modernization of Navy ships and systems.
12 weeks
Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA
Engineering
Recruiter vs. Reality
What the Recruiter Says
As an Engineering Duty Officer, you'll lead the design, construction, maintenance, and modernization of the Navy's fleet — applying advanced engineering expertise to the most complex naval systems on Earth. You'll manage shipbuilding programs, oversee fleet sustainment, and shape the future of naval engineering with a postgraduate education fully funded by the Navy.
What It's Actually Like
You are an Engineering Duty Officer, which means you're the Navy's designated engineering nerd with a commission. While other officers drive ships and fly planes, you design, build, maintain, and modernize them. Your portfolio includes naval architecture, systems engineering, program management, and the kind of technical oversight that keeps billion-dollar ship classes from becoming billion-dollar mistakes. You'll spend time in shipyards watching your designs get built (and discovering what the welders think of your blueprints), in program offices managing acquisition budgets that exceed some countries' GDP, and in labs testing systems that won't see a fleet for a decade. The ED community is small and senior-heavy — most EDOs are lateral transfers from URL communities who decided they wanted to build ships instead of drive them. Your engineering credentials are real: the Navy typically sends you for a master's in naval architecture, mechanical engineering, or systems engineering at MIT, Naval Postgraduate School, or equivalent. You will know more about how a ship actually works than the captain who drives it. Civilian transition is exceptional — defense contractors (HII, General Dynamics, BAE Systems), NAVSEA, and private shipbuilding firms pay $130-180K for program managers and engineers with ED experience.