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Is 25E (Electromagnetic Spectrum Manager) a Good MOS?

United States Army · Military Occupational Specialty

Quick Facts — 25E (Electromagnetic Spectrum Manager)

AIT / Training

12 weeks

Training Location

Fort Eisenhower, GA

Career Field

Signal

Early Data — Based on 0 reviews. Ratings will become more reliable as more service members contribute.
/ 5.0 overall

Verdict: Not enough data

Based on 0 community reviews from verified service members

Score Breakdown

Overall Rating/5.0
Quality of Life/5.0
Leadership/5.0
Civilian Translation/5.0

About 25E Electromagnetic Spectrum Manager

Plans and manages the electromagnetic spectrum for military operations. Coordinates frequency assignments to prevent interference and ensure communications, radar, and electronic systems operate effectively in complex environments.

Training Duration

12 weeks

Training Location

Fort Eisenhower, GA

Career Field

Signal

Recruiter vs. Reality

What the Recruiter Says

You'll manage the electromagnetic spectrum for military operations — assigning frequencies to prevent interference, coordinating with the host nation and joint partners, and ensuring that every radio, radar, and electronic system can operate without degrading each other. Spectrum management is a growing specialty as the electromagnetic environment gets more contested. The FCC, NTIA, defense contractors, and commercial wireless companies all employ spectrum managers. It's a technical niche with consistent demand and salaries that reflect how few people actually understand how to do it.

What It's Actually Like

You manage the electromagnetic spectrum, which is the invisible terrain that every radio, radar, SATCOM system, drone, and electronic device operates in, and which is increasingly contested in ways that make spectrum management more operationally important than it has ever been. Your job involves frequency coordination, interference resolution, spectrum monitoring, and supporting electronic warfare planning. In garrison this means a lot of coordination meetings and spreadsheets and MCEB database work. In the field it means you're the person who explains to the S6 why their radio and the fires net are stepping on each other and what to do about it. The technical background in electromagnetic theory, propagation, and interference is genuinely substantive and is one of those foundational knowledge sets that the Army will not fully utilize but that employers will. Defense contractors supporting EW programs, the FCC and NTIA in the federal space, and telecom companies all have uses for people who understand spectrum management at an operational level. The MOS is technical enough to be interesting and joint enough to provide broad exposure to how modern military operations actually work electronically.

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FAQ

Is 25E a Good MOS? — FAQ

Q01Is 25E (Electromagnetic Spectrum Manager) a good MOS?
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Q02What is the quality of life like for 25E?
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Q03Does 25E translate well to civilian careers?
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