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Mechanic - Entry Level (94517) at U.S. Army
Job Description
Mechanic
Job Overview:
Unlock the path to becoming an exceptional mechanic. System maintainers excel in every facet of their vehicles, providing diagnostic services on the roadside and adeptly handling wiring harness repairs. This role presents endless possibilities for progressing in your career, with the potential to attain 124 technical certifications. Apply today to kickstart your professional journey.
Requirements:
Attend a 24-week paid training program to gain skills and certifications in vehicle maintenance, equipment maintenance, electronic maintenance, roadside services, safety policies, safe hazmat handling, heavy equipment operations, electrical repairs, preventative maintenance, winch operations, crane operations, and diagnostic equipment operations.
Your job experience may qualify for a reduced training timeline and promotion.
Advanced certifications require additional full funded training programs.
Benefits:
Pay and Promotion:
Additional Career Opportunities:
Upon successful completion of first term contract, you are guaranteed up to 5 interviews with your choice 1,200 industry leading organizations including Tesla, American Medical Response, Mercedes Benz, and Mustang Cat.
Similar Career Fields Include: Mechanic, Automotive Service Technician, Tow Truck Driver.
About Our Organization:
The U.S. Army is wealth of possibilities for your future - whether you are looking to build a meaningful career, continue your education, or start a family, the Army is committed to helping you build the future you are looking for and improve yourself in the process. Be All You Can Be.
Now Hiring Full and Part Time Positions.
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Typical entry-level pay: $38k for Computer, Automated Teller, and Office Machine Repairers nationally
Mid-level roles pay ~22% more—room to grow.
Hot hiring, constrained wages
Employers are hiring actively, but pay hasn't caught up with demand. Focus on competing offers and non-salary benefits.
Why this market feels harder than it looks
This market is hiring aggressively, but compensation hasn't caught up and most openings are backfilling churn, not expansion. Employers are filling roles, but not bidding wages up.
Who this leverage applies to
Where to negotiate
Likely Possible Unlikely
Watch out for
Don't let hiring headlines mislead you—focus on concrete offers. Your leverage may be less durable than it appears—move decisively.
Does this path compound?
Steady work, but limited growth in both jobs and pay.
Openings come from turnover, not new growth. Differentiate to advance.