The Navy beat its recruiting goal for new sailors this year, signing up 45,000 new recruits. The service announced the milestone on Thursday. It’s the highest number of people signing up for the Navy in roughly two decades.
“Today’s Navy is stronger because tens of thousands of Americans chose to answer the call to serve,” Rear Adm. Jim Waters, the head of Navy Recruiting Command, said. “Reaching this milestone is not simply about achieving a recruiting objective – it’s about delivering the talented Sailors our Fleet needs to maintain readiness in an increasingly complex security environment.”
The early success marks the second year in a row of the service bringing in far more recruits than its goal. In 2024, the Navy only barely hit its recruiting quota, but in 2025 it brought in 44,096 new sailors, nearly 9% about that year’s aim. That was after the Navy also hit its goal early, signing up 40,600 by June.
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This fiscal year the Navy set its quota higher by roughly 10% and met it early. It’s a turnaround from 2023, where the service failed to meet its goal of new officers and enlisted sailors by several hundred and several thousand, respectively. That year saw several branches of the armed forces fall short, causing them to overhaul their recruiting strategies to better reach Americans.
Last year, Waters credited the success to clearer processes for tattoos and medical waivers, as well as new marketing strategies aimed at Gen Z Americans. This year, he said the wider success over the last three years with a modernized recruiting strategy, better data and accelerating applicant timelines.
“Our recruiters never lost sight of what matters most – people,” Waters said. “Every contract represents someone who chose to serve something greater than themselves.”
The Navy also said that it is working to strengthen its Delayed Entry Program, which allows people to sign a contract but wait up to a year before shipping out to start boot camp.
The Navy joins several other branches in beating their recruiting goals early this year. In April, the Department of the Air Force said that both the Air Force and Space Force hit their target five months early. The Army meanwhile said in May that it met its quota of 61,500 recruits.