The Military to Civilian Transition Timeline
The biggest mistake veterans make is starting too late. Career transition is not a two-week process. It is a 12 to 18 month process that requires action on multiple fronts simultaneously. Here is what the ideal timeline looks like.
12 Months Before ETS or Retirement
- Take a career assessment to identify which civilian paths match your personality and background
- Research salary ranges for your target roles in your target location
- Start building your LinkedIn profile while still in uniform
- Begin networking with veterans in your target industry
- Apply for SkillBridge if your unit and command will approve it
6 to 12 Months Before ETS
- Build your civilian resume and have it reviewed by someone outside the military
- Start the VA disability claims process (do not wait until after separation)
- Research GI Bill options: Chapter 33 Post-9/11, Chapter 30 Montgomery, or VR and E if you have a disability rating
- Attend the Transition Assistance Program at your installation
- Research veteran-friendly employers in your target area
3 to 6 Months Before ETS
- Apply for positions actively, not just casually browsing
- Complete any certifications that will make your civilian resume stronger
- Practice civilian interview techniques, which are very different from military board interviews
- Set up informational interviews with people working in your target field
Understanding Your GI Bill Education Benefits
The Post-9/11 GI Bill (Chapter 33) covers tuition and fees at public in-state schools up to 100 percent, provides a monthly housing allowance based on the E-5 with dependents BAH rate for the school's ZIP code, and includes a stipend for books and supplies. For veterans with a disability rating of 20 percent or higher, the Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment program (VR and E, or Chapter 31) can be even more valuable, covering tuition, fees, books, and a monthly subsistence allowance.
The Most In-Demand Veteran Careers in 2025
Cybersecurity
$75,000 to $130,000. Veterans with signals, cyber, or intelligence backgrounds are aggressively recruited. CompTIA Security Plus is the fastest path in.
Supply Chain and Logistics
$60,000 to $105,000. 88M, 92A, and 92Y veterans translate directly. Amazon, Walmart, and defense contractors actively recruit veterans for these roles.
Federal Government (GS Positions)
$50,000 to $130,000+. Veterans receive hiring preference. Many GS positions are explicitly designed for veterans with your specialty codes.
Project and Program Management
$80,000 to $140,000. Military officers and senior NCOs translate naturally to PM roles. PMP certification dramatically increases compensation.
Healthcare
$45,000 to $120,000+. 68W and medical corps veterans have clear pathways to RN, PA, and healthcare administrator roles. VA healthcare is a major employer.
Law Enforcement and Security
$55,000 to $95,000. 31B MPs and 31D CID agents have the strongest direct pathways. Federal law enforcement (FBI, DEA, CBP, Secret Service) actively recruits veterans.
What Employers Actually Want From Veterans
Most veterans undersell themselves because they focus on job-specific skills rather than the leadership and organizational competencies that civilian employers actually value most.
When a civilian hiring manager looks at a veteran resume, they want to see evidence of leadership at scale, the ability to perform under pressure, experience managing people and resources, a track record of accountability, and the discipline to execute without constant supervision.
These are not soft skills. They are premium skills that most civilian candidates in their 20s and 30s do not have. Your job in the interview is to translate your military experiences into the business language that makes this value visible.