Combat Engineers are the Army's explosives and machinery vocation. The official line: provide mobility (bridge gaps, clear mines so troops advance), counter-mobility (build obstacles, anti-tank ditches, lay minefields), and survivability (dig in, fortify, decontaminate). The motto is "Advance and Overcome".
The one thing to understand up front: your specialisation decides your two years. Combat engineer is not one job. It splits into a handful of very different tracks, each in its own battalion and camp, with two different pay tiers. Land in plant and it's one of the more relaxed combat postings. Land in field or armoured engineering and you're a "construction worker with a rifle" doing outfields plus heavy store work.
For the units engineers support, see infantry and armour.
How do you know you're a combat engineer
Check your posting order after BMT. Engineers usually show up as something like:
- Combat Engineer (Trainee)
- Engineer Pioneer
- A specialisation tag like Field, Bridging, or CBRD
Postings go by operational needs, PES and medical fitness, IPPT and BMT performance, plus your attributes. Combat engineer takes mostly PES A and B1 people. It's a combat vocation, so expect a physical baseline.
Official links
The path
Engineers go to the Engineer Training Institute (ETI) after finishing the BMT route set by your PES and pre-enlistee IPPT. For combat-fit enlistees who pass, that's the standard 9-week BMT before vocational training.
Everyone does a Common Engineer Course first, then branches into one specialisation.
- Common phase: roughly 8 to 9 weeks for pioneers. It's more lesson and test heavy than its reputation suggests: explosives theory, mines, demolition procedures, and practical stations, with evenings often admin time.
- Specialist cadets: longer, around 12.5 weeks, with the first ~5.5 weeks on common and basic demolition, then field specialisation.
- Live demolitions are real. Setting off charges is still part of the field-pioneer experience.
Outfield load ramps up hard in the specialisation and unit phase, not the common course. Course names and lengths change by batch, so confirm with your own posting.
The specialisations
This is the part that decides chill vs siong. The handbook formally lists five specialisations after the Common Engineer Course (Field, Armoured, Bridging, CBRD, EOD); plant and construction sits as a track under field engineering.
| Specialisation | Unit / camp | Allowance | Chill vs siong |
|---|---|---|---|
| Field engineer | 30 SCE / Jurong | $225 | One of the most siong: demolitions, wire obstacles, minefields, plus heavy store and equipment work |
| Plant / construction | 30 SCE / Jurong | $225 | Reputed most relaxed: excavators, dozers, machinery does the labour |
| Bridging / amphibious | 35 SCE / Seletar | $225 | Middle, very company dependent. Float bridges, rafts, assault boats; the bridging course is hard |
| Armoured engineer | 38 SCE / Sungei Gedong | $225 | Siong, around field level. Vehicle-launched bridges, counter-mine vehicles, armour tempo |
| EOD | 36 SCE / Nee Soon | $500 | Hard, specialised course. Less jungle outfield after, more standby and event duty |
| CBRD | 39 SCE / Nee Soon | $500 | Hard course in masks and suits, heat heavy. More admin and standby once operational |
Two things to read off that table:
- EOD and CBRD pay more. They sit in the specialised high-risk tier at $500, not the $225 general-combat rate the other engineers draw. See the NSF allowance page for the full table.
- Plant is the soft landing, EOD/CBRD trade outfields for a brutal course. Field and armoured are the safe bets for "most siong".
Where you get posted
The specialisation table above is also your camp map:
- 30 SCE (field, plant): Jurong Camp, west side. Older regimental reputation, field-engineer tempo.
- 35 SCE (bridging, amphibious): Seletar Camp. Small and engineer-focused, food on the weaker side, life swings on your company.
- 38 SCE (armoured): Sungei Gedong Camp. Far from the gate and public transport, with a notorious uphill walk. Bunks and cookhouse get better reviews than the location.
- 36 SCE (EOD) and 39 SCE (CBRD): Nee Soon Camp, alongside HQ SCE and ETI. 39 SCE moved here in early 2024, so newer facilities and better bunks.
Always follow your official posting order. Companies move and life varies more by company culture than by battalion number.
Is combat engineer chill or siong
It depends entirely on your specialisation, then your company.
The siong versions
- Field (30 SCE): repeated outfields, demolitions, building obstacles, then long hours cleaning and maintaining stores. "Construction worker with a rifle."
- Armoured (38 SCE): long exercises at armour tempo, vehicle maintenance, muddy outfields, plus the Gedong commute penalty.
The harder-course versions
- EOD (36 SCE) and CBRD (39 SCE): the courses are physically punishing, especially CBRD work in gas masks and impermeable suits in the heat. But once operational, day-to-day is more standby, response training, and event sweeps than jungle outfields. They also pay the top tier.
The chill version
- Plant (30 SCE): machinery replaces most of the manual field-pioneer work, usually in a support element. Widely reputed the most relaxed engineer posting.
Even the "chill" postings have duties, IPPT, and exercise periods that fill a week fast.
Stay-in or nights out
Baseline is stay-in, five-in two-out, including the common course. Don't assume any core engineer specialisation is routinely stay-out.
- Course phases: theory weeks can leave some evening admin time; field and specialisation phases lose it to outfields and equipment prep.
- 35 SCE: a recent report describes Sunday book-in, Friday book-out if lucky, Thursday nights out for everyone, Tuesday too for IPPT Gold.
- 38 SCE: roughly a night out a week with quiet stretches between exercises.
- EOD / CBRD: training eats admin time (studying, suit washing, drills); operational periods have more downtime but weekend standby and event sweeps can take your rest, often repaid as off.
Treat nights out as a bonus, not a fixed schedule. Year 1 is busier; year 2 usually loosens up.
Vocation allowance
Combat engineer splits across two pay tiers:
- Field, plant, bridging, armoured: the $225 general-combat rate, like most combat vocations.
- EOD and CBRD: the $500 specialised high-risk rate, the same top tier as commandos and naval divers (this is the CBRE line on the official table).
That's on top of your rank allowance. Full breakdown on the NSF allowance page. Older posts quoting $300 or $400 for engineers are stale.
Is it worth anything after ORD
Honest answer: the experience is worth more than the paper.
- The engineer, EOD, and CBRD badges are military qualifications, not civilian licences.
- Plant operators get real excavator, dozer, and crane time, but SAF plant training does not automatically convert into an MOM-recognised commercial operator cert.
- EOD / CBRD training doesn't hand you a usable civilian bomb-disposal qualification, though it can help applying to adjacent government, defence, or safety roles.
- Some EOD/CBRD pioneers are dual-vocation drivers. If you complete the driving course and clock the mileage, your military Class 3 can convert to a civilian licence, same route as Transport.
Across all tracks the soft value is the usual one: discipline, teamwork, working under pressure, and a decent story.
Tips if you're posted to combat engineer
- Know your kit cold: the engineer who rigs charges, sets a bridge, or runs the machine fast is the one commanders trust and leave alone.
- Protect your back and feet: field and armoured engineering pile on weight and store work, so train your core and season your boots.
- Use the course admin time: clear your IPPT early to bank the award money, and use lull periods well. See free time and saving money.
- If you draw EOD or CBRD: the course is the hard part. Pace yourself, hydrate, and the allowance and steadier operational life are the payoff.
- Mindset for field/armoured: treat it like a combat vocation, because it is one.
The command route
Engineers also have a specialist and officer track. Do well and you can be picked for:
- Specialist Cadet School (SCS): train to become an engineer 3SG, with engineer pro-term at the School of Combat Engineers.
- Officer Cadet School (OCS): train to become an engineer officer. See the command school page.
Both add training time but rank you up faster and pay more by ORD.
Common questions
Is combat engineer a combat vocation?
Yes. The day-to-day ranges from relaxed plant work to siong field and armoured engineering, but the baseline is combat-fit and physical.
Which engineer specialisation is the most chill?
Plant and construction is the usual answer. Field and armoured are the most siong.
Which engineer pays the most?
EOD (36 SCE) and CBRD (39 SCE), at the $500 specialised high-risk rate. The other engineers draw $225.
Where do combat engineers train?
At the Engineer Training Institute (ETI), with HQ SCE and several battalions at Nee Soon, plus 30 SCE (Jurong), 35 SCE (Seletar), and 38 SCE (Sungei Gedong).
Do combat engineers still do live demolitions?
Yes, setting off charges is still part of field-engineer training.
Does combat engineer give a driving licence?
Only some tracks (often EOD/CBRD) include a driving course as a dual vocation. Conversion to a civilian licence depends on the mileage and clean-record bar, same as Transport.
Can I choose my specialisation?
Not really. It comes down to needs, your profile, and performance. You can indicate interest but it's not a guarantee.
Sources
- Combat Engineers - CMPB: the official vocation overview
- NS Vocations Handbook (PDF): the Common Engineer Course and five specialisations
- Singapore Combat Engineers - Singapore Army: mobility, counter-mobility, survivability and equipment
- Singapore Combat Engineers - Wikipedia: battalions, training school, camps, and kit
- r/NationalServiceSG: first-hand NSF accounts of specialisations, allowance, camps, and nights out