Best Tech Careers for Veterans in 2026: No Degree Required
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I spent 1.5 years after separating from the Navy sending out applications. Zero callbacks. When I finally broke through, one of the career fields I landed in was tech sales. No computer science degree. No coding bootcamp. Just the skills I already had from the military and a willingness to learn the product.
That experience taught me something most career advice sites get wrong. You do not need a four-year degree to build a real career in tech. Not in 2026. Not even close. The industry has moved toward skills-based hiring. And military veterans are sitting on exactly the skills these companies want.
This guide breaks down six tech careers you can start without a degree. Each one includes real salary data, the certifications that matter, and which military backgrounds transfer best. If you served in any branch, you already have a head start you probably do not realize yet.
Why Does Tech Keep Hiring Veterans Without Degrees?
Tech companies dropped degree requirements faster than any other industry. Google, Apple, IBM, and dozens of federal contractors removed the bachelor's requirement from most roles between 2020 and 2024. The reason is simple. They could not fill seats fast enough with traditional candidates.
But it goes deeper than just filling roles. Veterans bring things that are hard to train into a civilian hire.
- Security clearances: A TS/SCI clearance costs an employer $5,000 to $15,000 and takes 6 to 12 months to process. If you already have one, you skip that line entirely. Defense contractors and government IT shops will prioritize you for this reason alone.
- Structured problem-solving: The military teaches you to break big problems into steps, assign resources, and execute under pressure. That is project management. That is incident response. That is what tech teams pay six figures for.
- Leadership under pressure: A 25-year-old E-5 has more direct leadership experience than most civilian managers twice their age. Tech companies know this.
- Compliance mindset: You followed SOPs, tracked inventory down to the serial number, and documented everything. Cybersecurity, cloud operations, and IT governance run on that same mindset.
The demand is real. And the degree gatekeeping is fading. But you still need a plan. A certification, a portfolio, or proof that you can do the work. This article gives you that plan for six different career paths.
What Are the Best Tech Careers for Veterans in 2026?
Before diving into each role, here is the quick overview. These six careers all share four things. They pay well. They do not require a degree. They value military experience. And they have clear certification paths you can start today.
6 Tech Careers Veterans Can Start Without a Degree
Cybersecurity Analyst
$77K–$120K+ | Security+, CySA+, CISSP path
Cloud / DevOps Engineer
$90K–$140K+ | AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud certs
Technical Sales / Sales Engineer
$70K–$150K+ (with commission) | No cert required
IT Project Manager
$80K–$130K+ | CompTIA Project+, PMP
Data Analyst
$65K–$100K+ | Google Data Analytics Certificate
Help Desk / Systems Administrator
$45K–$85K+ | CompTIA A+, Network+
Salary ranges come from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook (2024–2025 data) and industry salary surveys. Your actual pay depends on location, clearance status, and experience level. Veterans with active clearances typically earn 10 to 20 percent more in cleared roles.
Now let me walk you through each one. What the job actually looks like. Which military backgrounds fit best. And how to get there.
How Do You Break Into Cybersecurity Without a Degree?
Cybersecurity is the career path veterans ask about most. And for good reason. The field has over 500,000 unfilled positions in the U.S. according to CyberSeek.org, a project funded by NIST and CompTIA. Employers are desperate. And they care about certifications and clearances far more than degrees.
What you would do: Monitor networks for threats. Run vulnerability scans. Respond to security incidents. Write security policies. Some roles focus on defense (protecting systems) and others focus on offense (penetration testing).
Salary range: The BLS reports a median annual wage of $120,360 for information security analysts as of May 2023. Entry-level roles with Security+ start around $65,000 to $77,000. Cleared roles in the D.C. area regularly exceed $130,000.
Which military backgrounds transfer best:
- Signal Corps (25 series) and Cyber (17 series) in the Army
- IT/Comms ratings (IT, CTN, CTR, CTT) in the Navy
- Cyber Operations (1B4, 3D0XX) in the Air Force
- Communications and data systems (06XX) in the Marines
- Any MOS that handled classified networks, COMSEC, or radio encryption
But you do not need a cyber MOS to get in. Plenty of infantry, logistics, and admin veterans have transitioned into cybersecurity. The cert path is what matters.
Certification path:
- CompTIA Security+ (your entry ticket, DoD 8570 baseline cert)
- CompTIA CySA+ (intermediate, shows you can analyze threats)
- CompTIA PenTest+ (if you want the offensive security track)
- CISSP (senior level, requires 5 years experience or 4 years + degree)
Many veterans qualify for the CompTIA veteran discount. That cuts your exam cost significantly. Your GI Bill can also cover many IT certifications if you go through an approved training program.
For a deeper look at this career path, read our full guide on cybersecurity jobs veterans can land without a degree.
Can Veterans Get Cloud and DevOps Jobs Without College?
Cloud computing is where the money is growing fastest. Every company, government agency, and defense contractor is moving infrastructure to the cloud. Someone has to build it, manage it, and keep it running. That is the cloud engineer and DevOps role.
What you would do: Build and maintain cloud infrastructure on platforms like AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud. Automate deployments. Monitor system performance. Write scripts to keep things running smoothly. Think of it as the tech version of maintaining a fleet of vehicles. Except the vehicles are servers and the motor pool is a data center you access from your laptop.
Salary range: The BLS groups cloud roles under "computer network architects" with a median salary of $126,900 as of May 2023. Entry-level cloud associate roles start around $80,000 to $95,000. Senior DevOps engineers in cleared environments regularly earn $140,000 to $170,000.
Which military backgrounds transfer best:
- Any IT or communications MOS/rating (you already understand networks)
- Signals intelligence analysts (data processing, system monitoring)
- Any role that managed servers, networks, or tactical communications equipment
- Logistics and supply chain (if you used ERP systems like GCSS-Army or SAP)
"Maintained communications equipment for battalion operations and ensured network connectivity across multiple operating environments."
"Managed 200+ node network across 4 sites. Configured Cisco switches and routers. Maintained 99.7% uptime for classified and unclassified systems serving 800 users."
Certification path:
- AWS Cloud Practitioner or Azure Fundamentals (AZ-900) (entry-level, proves cloud literacy)
- AWS Solutions Architect Associate or Azure Administrator (AZ-104) (the cert most employers want)
- AWS DevOps Engineer Professional or Kubernetes certifications (senior level)
AWS offers free training through their AWS Educate program. Microsoft has a similar program for Azure. Both are accessible with GI Bill benefits through approved providers.
If you want to learn coding first, check out VA-approved coding bootcamps that accept GI Bill funding.
Is Technical Sales a Good Fit for Veterans?
This is the career path I know best because I lived it. After working in federal logistics and contracting, I moved into tech sales. No engineering degree. No sales background on paper. But the skills I built in the military translated directly.
Tech sales is one of the most overlooked career paths for veterans. And it is one of the highest-paying options on this list with no degree needed.
What you would do: Sell software, cloud services, or IT solutions to businesses. As a Sales Development Rep (SDR), you prospect and qualify leads. As an Account Executive (AE), you run the full sales cycle from demo to close. As a Sales Engineer, you handle the technical side of demos and proposals.
Salary range: Base salary for SDRs starts at $50,000 to $65,000 with on-target earnings (OTE) of $70,000 to $90,000. Account Executives earn $80,000 to $120,000 base with OTE of $150,000 to $250,000+. The upside is uncapped commission. Top performers in enterprise sales clear $300,000+.
Why veterans crush it in tech sales:
- You learned to brief up: Presenting to officers taught you to communicate clearly and handle tough questions. That is a sales demo.
- You hit targets under pressure: Quota attainment is just a different kind of mission.
- You build relationships fast: You have worked with people from every background in high-stress situations. Building rapport with a VP of IT is easier than you think.
- Discipline and self-management: Sales gives you freedom but requires daily activity. Veterans show up and do the work.
"I went from federal contracting to tech sales with zero sales experience on my resume. The military taught me how to learn fast, communicate under pressure, and execute a plan. That is literally the job description for tech sales."
How to break in: Companies like Salesforce, Oracle, Cisco, and dozens of startups run veteran hiring programs for sales roles. Many offer paid training programs that teach you the product and sales methodology on the job. Look for "SDR" or "Business Development Representative" roles. These are the entry point.
No certification is required. But if you want an edge, Salesforce Trailhead (free) teaches you the CRM platform most companies use. HubSpot Sales Software Certification is also free and shows you understand the sales tech stack.
What About IT Project Management and Data Analytics?
These two career paths deserve their own sections because they are natural fits for veterans from almost any MOS or rating.
IT Project Management
If you ever planned a mission or coordinated logistics for a movement, you have done project management. Same if you managed a maintenance schedule for a fleet of vehicles. The civilian version uses different tools (Jira, Asana, Microsoft Project) but the core skill is the same. Organize tasks. Assign resources. Hit deadlines. Report progress.
Salary range: The BLS reports a median salary of $98,580 for project management specialists as of May 2023. IT project managers in tech companies earn $100,000 to $140,000. Cleared PM roles in defense contracting go higher.
Certification path:
- CompTIA Project+ (entry-level, no prerequisites, good for the resume)
- Google Project Management Certificate (Coursera, GI Bill eligible through some providers)
- PMP (Project Management Professional) (the gold standard. Requires 36 months of project experience with a degree, or 60 months without. Your military time counts.)
The best part about PMP eligibility is that your military project experience counts. Led a team through a deployment cycle? That is project management. Ran a maintenance overhaul schedule? That counts too. PMI, the organization behind PMP, specifically recognizes military service as qualifying experience.
Data Analytics
Data analytics is the fastest-growing entry point into tech for people without a traditional tech background. You do not need to code. You need to understand data, find patterns, and present findings to decision-makers.
Salary range: The BLS reports a median salary of $103,500 for data scientists and mathematical science occupations as of May 2023. Entry-level data analyst roles start at $55,000 to $70,000. Mid-career analysts with SQL and visualization skills earn $80,000 to $110,000.
Which military backgrounds fit:
- Intelligence analysts (35 series Army, IS/CT ratings Navy, 1N Air Force)
- Operations research analysts
- Supply and logistics (you tracked inventory data, consumption rates, readiness metrics)
- Anyone who built PowerPoint briefs with charts, metrics, and trend data for commanders
Certification path:
- Google Data Analytics Professional Certificate (Coursera, 6 months, covers SQL, R, Tableau)
- IBM Data Analyst Professional Certificate (another Coursera option)
- Microsoft Power BI Data Analyst (PL-300) (strong for government and enterprise roles)
GI Bill Covers These Certifications
Most of these certifications are GI Bill eligible when taken through an approved training provider. Check the VA WEAMS database for the full list of covered programs.
What About Help Desk and Sysadmin Roles?
Not everyone wants to start at the top of the salary chart. And that is fine. Help desk and systems administrator roles are the front door to IT. They pay decently from day one. And they give you hands-on experience that feeds directly into the higher-paying roles above.
What you would do: Help desk (Tier 1/Tier 2 support) means fixing user problems. Password resets, software installs, network troubleshooting. Systems administrators manage servers, user accounts, backups, and network infrastructure. Both roles are in every company, every government agency, and every military base that has a contract IT shop.
Salary range: The BLS reports a median salary of $59,660 for computer support specialists and $95,360 for network and systems administrators as of May 2023. Help desk starts at $40,000 to $50,000. Sysadmins with 2 to 4 years experience earn $75,000 to $95,000. Add a clearance and those numbers jump $10,000 to $20,000.
Why start here: These roles hire fast. The barrier to entry is low. You learn on the job. And after 1 to 2 years, you can specialize into cybersecurity, cloud, or DevOps with those higher salaries. Think of it as your E-1 to E-3 phase. You are learning the basics so you can promote into the real money.
Certification path:
- CompTIA A+ (the baseline IT cert, covers hardware and software fundamentals)
- CompTIA Network+ (networking fundamentals, required for many DoD IT contracts)
- Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator (strong for enterprise help desk roles)
- CompTIA Server+ or vendor-specific certs (Microsoft, Linux) as you specialize
Help desk is the most common first stop for veterans entering tech. It is not glamorous. But it works. Many veterans start at help desk and move into six-figure cybersecurity or cloud roles within 2 to 4 years.
How Do You Match Your MOS to a Tech Career?
The hardest part of picking a tech career is knowing which one fits your background. A 25B Signal Support Specialist has a different path than an 0311 Infantry Marine. Both can get into tech. But the entry point is different.
Use BMR's military-to-civilian career tool to see which tech roles match your specific MOS, rating, or AFSC. It shows you civilian job titles, salary ranges, and the skills that transfer from your exact military job.
If you already know you want tech but need help with your resume, BMR's resume builder translates your military experience into the language tech hiring managers actually look for. Paste a job posting and it tailors your resume to that specific role. Free for your first two resumes.
For a broader look at tech careers for veterans, read our guides on landing your first tech job after the military and breaking into IT without a degree.
How Should You Get Started This Week?
You have the information. Now act on it. Here are four steps you can take this week to move from "thinking about tech" to actually getting into the field.
Pick One Career Path
Do not try to learn cybersecurity, cloud, and sales at the same time. Pick the one that fits your background and interests. Commit to it for 90 days.
Start Your First Certification
Security+ for cyber. AWS Cloud Practitioner for cloud. CompTIA A+ for help desk. Google Data Analytics for data. Sign up today and set a test date 8 to 12 weeks out.
Build Your Tech Resume
Your military resume will not work for tech roles. Use BMR's resume builder to translate your experience into tech language. Tailor it to a specific job posting you find this week.
Apply to 5 Jobs This Week
Search for entry-level roles on ClearanceJobs, USAJOBS, and LinkedIn. Filter for "no degree required" and apply with a tailored resume for each posting. Five applications. Not fifty. Quality over volume.
The veterans who break into tech fastest are not the ones with the most certifications. They are the ones who pick a path, start moving, and adjust as they learn.
If you want to see which salary premium your security clearance commands, we have a full breakdown on that too. And if SkillBridge is still an option for you, check whether you qualify for SkillBridge to get paid while you train at a tech company.
Tech does not care where you went to school. It cares what you can do. And military veterans can do a lot.
Frequently Asked Questions
QDo you need a degree to work in tech as a veteran?
QWhat is the highest-paying tech career for veterans without a degree?
QDoes military experience count toward PMP certification?
QWhich military MOS transfers best to cybersecurity?
QCan I use my GI Bill for tech certifications?
QHow long does it take to break into tech after the military?
QIs tech sales really a good career for veterans?
About the Author
Brad Tachi is the CEO and founder of Best Military Resume and a 2025 Military Friendly Vetrepreneur of the Year award recipient for overseas excellence. A former U.S. Navy Diver with over 20 years of combined military, private sector, and federal government experience, Brad brings unparalleled expertise to help veterans and military service members successfully transition to rewarding civilian careers. Having personally navigated the military-to-civilian transition, Brad deeply understands the challenges veterans face and specializes in translating military experience into compelling resumes that capture the attention of civilian employers. Through Best Military Resume, Brad has helped thousands of service members land their dream jobs by providing expert resume writing, career coaching, and job search strategies tailored specifically for the veteran community.
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