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How the Navy’s ‘Hell Week’ Reveals Who Has What it Takes to Be a SEAL

by SOFREP News Jan 29, 2021
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US Navy SEAL candidates during Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) training in Coronado, California, January 23, 2018. US Navy/PO1 Abe McNatt
US Navy SEAL candidates during Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) training in Coronado, California, January 23, 2018. US Navy/PO1 Abe McNatt

Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) training is a six-month selection process and the gateway into the Navy’s SEAL Teams.

Broken into three phases (First Phase, Second Phase, Third Phase), BUD/S has an attrition rate of between 70 and 85 percent. The complete SEAL pipeline attrition rate — from the moment someone walks into the recruiter’s office to the end of advanced qualification training — is over 90 percent.

First Phase is the basic conditioning part of BUD/S. Students learn to work as a team under increasingly difficult physical and mental conditions, with four-mile timed runs, obstacle course timed runs, and two-mile timed swims determining who stays and who goes. This phase is where most students’ dream of becoming a SEAL ends. This is also where Hell Week takes place.

Second Phase is the dive part of BUD/S, where students are introduced to basic combat diver operations. The pool competence test in this phase is arguably the second-hardest event during BUD/S, after Hell Week.

Third Phase is the land warfare part of BUD/S. Students receive basic training in marksmanship, explosives, land navigation, and small-unit tactics. This phase mostly takes place on California’s San Clemente Island.

Navy SEAL Hell Week

Navy SEALs Hell Week training
BUD/S class 245 students during a Hell Week surf drill evolution with a SEAL instructor, in Coronado, April 15, 2003. (Getty)

Hell Week takes place during the fourth week of First Phase. (The exact time in the training has shifted several times during BUD/S’s history.)

Hell Week lasts almost six days — Sunday evening to Friday morning — during which students run more than 200 miles, often with boats on their heads, swim, do hours of physical training with logs, and numerous other brutal evolutions. They are constantly wet, cold, and sandy and only get about four hours of sleep throughout the week.

During Hell Week, students are fed regularly and consume over 8,000 calories a day but still lose weight.

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