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Is 68F (Physical Therapy Specialist) a Good MOS?

United States Army · Military Occupational Specialty

Quick Facts — 68F (Physical Therapy Specialist)

AIT / Training

10 weeks

Training Location

Fort Sam Houston, TX

Career Field

Medical

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 68F Physical Therapy Specialist

Assists physical therapists in providing rehabilitative care to soldiers. Performs therapeutic exercises, applies modalities, and completes functional assessments under PT supervision.

Training Duration

10 weeks

Training Location

Fort Sam Houston, TX

Career Field

Medical

Recruiter vs. Reality

What the Recruiter Says

You'll assist Army physical therapists treating soldiers with musculoskeletal injuries, post-surgical rehab, and performance limitations — high volume, real clinical work in busy PT clinics. The PTA (Physical Therapy Assistant) license requires a two-year degree and examination, but Army clinical hours count toward the educational prerequisite in most programs. PTAs earn $55-70K with steady demand. If PT is your career goal, the Army gives you hands-on clinical exposure that informs your education and makes you a more competitive applicant to PTA programs.

What It's Actually Like

You assist physical therapists in rehabilitating soldiers who are broken in the specific ways that Army service breaks people: backs from ruck marches, knees from airborne operations, shoulders from combatives and weapon systems, ankles from every possible terrain feature that exists. The patient population is motivated to recover and simultaneously motivated to hide their pain, which creates an interesting clinical dynamic where your job includes both treatment and realistic assessment of actual function. The PT clinic is often one of the more functional Army environments — there is a clear purpose, clear patient outcomes to measure, and a therapeutic culture that is more collaborative than the command-and-control model most of the Army runs on. Your civilian pathway as a physical therapist assistant (PTA) requires an Associate's degree program, but your Army experience gives you clinical exposure that most PTA students don't have. PT aide and PTA positions pay well and are in consistent demand. The field has a strong job market driven by aging demographics and increasing recognition of rehabilitation medicine. Your understanding of musculoskeletal injury from the Army side of the table — as someone who has seen what the Army does to bodies — is an unusual and useful perspective.

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FAQ

Is 68F a Good MOS? — FAQ

Q01Is 68F (Physical Therapy Specialist) a good MOS?
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Q02What is the quality of life like for 68F?
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Q03Does 68F translate well to civilian careers?
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