Should You Include Combat Experience on Your Resume? A Veteran's Guide
Combat experience is some of the most intense, high-stakes work any professional will ever do. You made decisions under extreme pressure, led people in life-threatening situations, and operated in environments that most civilians cannot imagine. But when it comes to your resume, combat experience requires careful handling.
The question is not whether your combat experience matters — it absolutely does. The question is how to present it in a way that communicates your value without making civilian hiring managers uncomfortable or confused.
The Short Answer: Yes, But Translate It
Combat experience should be on your resume. Leaving it off creates unexplained gaps and wastes some of your most impressive leadership and operational experience. But it needs to be translated into business language that civilian employers understand and value.
Focus on the skills and outcomes of your combat experience, not the combat itself. Employers care about your leadership under pressure, decision-making ability, resource management, and adaptability — not the specific tactical details.
What Combat Experience Really Demonstrates
Strip away the military context and combat experience proves capabilities that civilian employers pay top dollar for.
Leadership under extreme pressure. You made decisions when the stakes could not have been higher. In civilian terms, this translates to crisis management, executive decision-making, and the ability to perform under pressure — skills that companies pay six figures for.
Adaptability and problem-solving. No plan survives first contact. You adapted continuously, solving problems with limited resources and incomplete information. This is exactly what fast-moving companies need from their operations leaders, project managers, and executives.
Team leadership in high-stress environments. You kept people focused, motivated, and effective when conditions were at their worst. This kind of leadership — real leadership, not the corporate conference variety — is extremely rare and extremely valuable.
Resource management under constraints. You managed equipment, supplies, budgets, and logistics in austere environments. Doing more with less is a skill that every organization values, especially during economic downturns or rapid growth phases.
Cross-functional coordination. Combat operations involve coordinating across multiple units, agencies, and sometimes international partners. This directly translates to stakeholder management, cross-departmental collaboration, and executive communication skills.
How to Translate Combat Experience: Before and After
Combat Experience Translation
✗ Too Military
- Conducted combat patrols in Helmand Province
- Led platoon in kinetic operations against insurgent forces
- Managed QRF response to IED and TIC events
- Executed COIN strategy at company level
✓ Civilian Translation
- Led daily security and engagement operations across 200 sq km area of responsibility
- Directed 42-person team executing high-risk operations in a remote, austere environment
- Managed rapid response team, coordinating emergency operations with average 8-minute deployment time
- Developed and implemented community engagement strategy for 15,000-person district
Notice the pattern: the translated versions keep the scope, scale, and impact while removing terminology that only military audiences understand. A hiring manager reading the civilian version sees an operations leader who managed teams, coordinated emergencies, and executed strategy at scale — exactly what they need.
When to Emphasize Combat Experience
Defense contractors. Companies like Booz Allen, CACI, Leidos, and Raytheon understand combat experience directly. You can use more military terminology here. Deployments, operational planning, and tactical leadership are directly relevant to their contracts.
Law enforcement and security. Combat experience is a strong asset for police departments, federal law enforcement, and corporate security roles. Emphasize threat assessment, crisis response, and decision-making experience.
Emergency management. FEMA, state emergency agencies, and humanitarian organizations value the crisis management, logistics, and leadership skills combat veterans bring.
Executive and senior leadership. At director and VP level, combat experience demonstrates high-stakes leadership that sets you apart. Frame it as executive crisis management and strategic operations leadership.
When to De-Emphasize Combat Details
Entry-level corporate positions. Focus on transferable skills rather than combat context. Led 42-person team in a remote high-pressure environment communicates capability without combat framing.
Industries with different cultures. Education, healthcare, and social services may have hiring managers less familiar with military contexts. Translate more carefully into their professional language.
When it is not relevant to the role. For a data analyst position, weight your bullets toward analysis and problem-solving rather than tactical operations. Include deployments for work history continuity but emphasize relevant skills.
Combat Experience by Career Field: How to Translate It
The translation approach differs based on what you did during your deployment.
Combat arms (infantry, armor, artillery): Your experience translates to operations management, team leadership, crisis response, and strategic planning. Focus on personnel managed, area of responsibility, missions planned and executed, and resource management. A platoon leader in Afghanistan managed a 42-person organization executing daily operations across a geographic area larger than most corporate campuses.
Combat support (signal, engineers, military police): Your deployment experience shows you can deliver technical services under extreme conditions. An engineer who built roads and structures in a combat zone managed construction projects with the added complexity of security threats. A signal soldier who maintained communications networks during combat operations kept critical infrastructure running in conditions civilian IT professionals never face.
Combat service support (logistics, medical, maintenance): Your deployment experience demonstrates you can manage supply chains, deliver healthcare, and maintain equipment in the most challenging environments possible. A logistics NCO who kept a forward operating base supplied managed a supply chain with zero margin for error. A combat medic treated patients under conditions that would shut down a civilian emergency room.
Intelligence and cyber: Your deployment work involved analyzing threats, producing intelligence, and supporting operations in real time. Focus on analytical volume, products delivered, decision-support impact, and collaboration across organizations. Avoid classified details but describe the scale and pace of your analytical work.
Interview Tips for Discussing Combat Experience
Your resume gets you the interview. But you also need to be prepared to discuss your military experience in person. Here are guidelines for talking about combat experience in civilian interviews.
Keep it professional. Answer questions about your military service the same way you would answer questions about any previous job. Focus on what you accomplished, what you learned, and how it applies to the role. Do not tell war stories unless specifically asked, and even then keep responses brief and professional.
Redirect to transferable skills. When asked about your military experience, pivot to the skills the interviewer cares about. Instead of describing a specific operation, describe the leadership, planning, and execution skills you developed. The interviewer wants to know what you can do for their company.
Prepare for uncomfortable questions. Some interviewers will ask if you have PTSD, if you killed anyone, or other inappropriate questions. These questions are illegal in most contexts, but they happen. Prepare a professional redirect: I appreciate the question. My military service gave me exceptional leadership and crisis management skills that I am excited to apply here.
Do not apologize for your service. Some veterans unconsciously downplay their military experience in civilian settings. Do not do this. Your service is an asset. Present it with confidence and pride while keeping the conversation focused on professional value.
What to Never Include
- Kill counts or enemy casualties — never appropriate on civilian resumes
- Graphic descriptions of combat — keep descriptions professional and outcome-focused
- Classified operations by name — describe general scope without revealing specifics
- Medical information including PTSD — medical details do not belong on resumes
- Extensive weapons qualifications — unless applying to law enforcement or security
Awards and Decorations: What to Include
Combat awards can strengthen your resume when presented correctly. The key is adding context about what you did to earn them.
Include with context: "Awarded Bronze Star for meritorious service leading logistics operations supporting 3,200 personnel during 15-month deployment" communicates both the recognition and the scope of your contribution.
Limit the list. Include your 2-3 most significant awards, especially those that demonstrate leadership, initiative, or exceptional performance. Do not list every ribbon, medal, and commendation — it takes up space that should be used for quantified accomplishments.
Skip non-combat awards unless relevant. Good Conduct Medals, service ribbons, and campaign medals add little to a civilian resume. Focus on awards that were earned through individual achievement or leadership — Meritorious Service Medal, Army Commendation Medal with valor device, or similar awards that came with a citation describing what you specifically accomplished.
Handling Multiple Deployments
Deployments are not employment gaps. List them as part of your military work experience. If you deployed multiple times in the same role, note total deployment time within your position description rather than listing each separately.
Example: Operations Manager, U.S. Army, 2018-2022 (including 24 months deployed to Middle East). Led 35-person logistics team supporting 2,400-person brigade. Managed $6.2M equipment inventory with 99.8% accountability across 3 forward operating locations.
If deployment involved significantly different responsibilities than garrison duties, list it as a separate position entry to highlight the expanded scope.
The BMR Resume Builder translates combat and deployment experience into professional civilian language automatically. It keeps the impact of what you accomplished while presenting it in terms every hiring manager can understand.
Your combat experience is not a liability — it is one of your greatest assets. Translate it from military jargon into professional language that communicates your leadership, decision-making, and operational capabilities. Done right, your deployment experience becomes the most compelling section on your resume.
For more on presenting military experience, see our complete guide to listing military service. Also read what skills to put on a resume and hidden military skills civilians value.
Related: How to write a professional summary that gets you hired and how to write work experience sections on your resume.
Frequently Asked Questions
QShould I mention combat on my civilian resume?
QHow do I describe deployment experience on a resume?
QWill combat experience scare off civilian employers?
QShould I mention PTSD or combat injuries on my resume?
QHow do I handle multiple deployments on my resume?
QShould I mention awards earned in combat?
QIs combat experience more valuable for certain civilian jobs?
QHow do I explain a combat deployment gap in civilian work history?
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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