Is 2500 (Judge Advocate General's Corps Officer) a Good Rating?
United States Navy · Navy Rating
Quick Facts — 2500 (Judge Advocate General's Corps Officer)
AIT / Training
10 weeks
Training Location
Naval Justice School, Newport, RI
Career Field
Legal
Verdict: Not enough data
Based on 0 community reviews from verified service members
Score Breakdown
About 2500 Judge Advocate General's Corps Officer
Practices law within the Navy as a military attorney handling criminal, administrative, and operational law.
10 weeks
Naval Justice School, Newport, RI
Legal
Recruiter vs. Reality
What the Recruiter Says
As a Judge Advocate, you'll practice law at the intersection of military justice and national security — advising commanders on the law of armed conflict, prosecuting and defending courts-martial, and shaping policy that affects hundreds of thousands of service members. The Navy JAG Corps offers legal experience in areas that civilian firms can't match: operational law, international law, and military justice.
What It's Actually Like
You are a Navy JAG — a Judge Advocate General's Corps Officer — which means you went to law school, passed the bar, and then decided that practicing law would be more interesting if you occasionally did it on a ship. Military justice, operational law, law of armed conflict, environmental law, administrative separations, international law, and whatever insane legal question the skipper just asked at 2200 on a Friday. You will prosecute courts-martial where the facts are so bizarre that civilian attorneys openly question reality. You will advise commanding officers who absolutely do not want your legal opinion and will ask you to find a way to make the illegal thing legal. 'Sir, you can't do that' should be on your business card. Your law school classmates are billing $700 an hour at Biglaw. You're making O-3 pay, standing on the bridge advising the CO on rules of engagement, and wondering why your student loans don't understand military service. But you'll practice law in areas civilian attorneys only read about — operational law in combat zones, law of the sea, LOAC — and every firm with a government contracts practice will want you.