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Home/Questions/Navy Boot Camp: What to Expect at RTC Great Lakes

What is Navy boot camp like, and how do you prepare?

TL;DR — Quick Answer

Navy boot camp (Recruit Training Command) is 10 weeks at RTC Great Lakes in Illinois. You'll learn basic seamanship, military customs, firefighting, damage control, and weapons qualification. It's physically and mentally demanding, but the attrition rate is low if you come prepared.

The 10-week breakdown

Boot camp is divided into training weeks with progressive difficulty. The first few weeks focus on administrative processing, uniform issue, and basic military bearing. Mid-weeks introduce physical training benchmarks, classroom instruction, and hands-on seamanship. The final weeks include Battle Stations (a capstone event), graduation prep, and receiving your first orders.

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Photo

Navy recruits training at Recruit Training Command (RTC) Great Lakes — drill, firefighting, and Battle Stations exercises

View on DVIDS (Defense Visual Information)→

Physical readiness test (PRT) standards

You must pass the Navy PRT before graduating. For males age 17–19, the minimum is approximately 62 curl-ups, 51 push-ups, and a 12:15 1.5-mile run. Females have different standards. These are minimums — aim higher. Failing the PRT can lead to extra training time (FIT division) and delayed graduation.

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Chart / Data

Official Navy PRT standards — minimum and maximum scores for curl-ups, push-ups, and 1.5-mile run by age group and gender

View on MyNavy HR→

How to prepare

Start running 3–4 times per week, working up to 1.5 miles at a good pace. Practice push-ups and planks daily. Study the START Guide your recruiter gives you — it contains everything you'll be tested on. Memorize your general orders, rank structure, and the Sailor's Creed. The more you prepare, the less stressful boot camp will be.

What happens after boot camp?

A-school is next. See how long each rate's training pipeline takes.

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