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Deployment & Underway Essentials for Navy Nukes: The Packing List Nobody Gives You

By The Nuke Out Staff • October 31, 2025 • Lifestyle • 10 min read

Your division officer tells you the ship is getting underway in 72 hours. You grab your seabag, toss in some uniforms, and figure you'll deal with the rest later. Then you're three days into a deployment sleeping on a bare rack pad with no pillow, eating the same meal twice because you missed the other one, and your buddy has a fan and blackout curtains while you're sweating through a 4-hour sleep cycle under fluorescent light bleed.

We've all been there. The Navy gives you a packing list for boot camp, but nobody hands you a real-world guide for what to bring underway — especially as a nuke, where your life revolves around the engineering spaces, a 6-section watch rotation (if you're lucky), and study hours that never stop.

This is the list we wish we'd had. It's built by nukes who've done multiple deployments and countless underways, and it covers everything from rack comfort to watch station survival to the stuff that keeps you sane when you haven't seen the sun in a week.

Rack & Sleep Gear

Sleep is currency underway. You're standing watch in the plant, doing maintenance, studying for boards, and fitting meals somewhere in between. Every minute of rack time matters, and having the right gear is the difference between actually sleeping and just lying there.

Watch Station Essentials

You're going to spend more time on watch than anywhere else on the ship. The plant doesn't care if you're comfortable, but being prepared makes long watches more bearable and helps you stay sharp.

Study & Quals Materials

If you're not on watch or sleeping, you're studying. That's the nuke life underway. Whether you're working on your EOOW board, getting your fish, or studying for advancement exams, having the right materials organized makes a huge difference.

Pro Tip

Start Thinking About What Comes After

Deployment gives you something civilians never get: uninterrupted time to plan. Use downtime to start mapping your transition — certifications, resume drafts, and which companies hire nukes.

See the Full Transition Checklist →

Hygiene & Personal Care

The ship store runs out of everything good by week two of deployment. Don't rely on it. Bring enough supplies for the full underway, plus extra to barter with. Seriously — a spare stick of decent deodorant is worth more than cash in month three of deployment.

Comfort & Morale Items

Morale underway is a real thing. Deployments grind on you — same spaces, same faces, same routine, day after day. The small comfort items are what keep you human.

Clothing & Uniform Extras

Admin & Important Documents

Keep these in a waterproof bag or pouch stored in a secure spot in your rack or locker. You don't want to need something and realize it's sitting on your kitchen counter back home.

The "Nobody Tells You" List

These are the things first-time deployers never think of, and the ones that veterans always bring.

Planning Your Transition?

Deployment is the perfect time to start. Get the free 12-Month Transition Playbook — career paths, salary data, and the timeline the Navy won't give you.

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What NOT to Bring

Quick list of things that waste space or cause problems:

Final Thoughts

Deployments and underways are a grind, but they're also the experiences that define the nuke community. The watches, the mid-rats, the 2 AM board study sessions with your rack light and a stack of flashcards — that stuff stays with you long after you hang up the coveralls.

Pack smart, bring the comfort items that keep you sane, and take care of your shipmates. The nuke who shares their extra Gold Bond or their fan charger is the nuke everyone wants on their watch team.

And if you're starting to think about what comes after the Navy while you're out there, that's completely normal. Some of the best transition plans start on deployment, when you've got time to think without the noise of shore duty. We've got everything you need to start planning — from civilian career paths to resume guides to financial planning.

Keep Reading

Culture Shock: 7 Things Navy Nukes Don't Expect About Civilian Jobs
From watch rotations to office politics — what nobody warns you about the transition.
Transitioning as a Navy Nuke Family
Financial planning, location decisions, and supporting each other through the change.

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