The maximum age for active-duty officers non-prior service Navy applicants is
39 years as of 2019. It was
increased from 34 in 2018.
Should you like to join as an intelligence officer, you can apply for direct commissioning program if you have at least a Bachelors Degree and feel you have a good grip on history and current events and can write pretty good. You will be put before a board of senior officers who will interview you and hopefully give you a good recommendation. Then, your application will be forwarded to the annual selection board where it is even more competitive for selection for a billet. If you get selected, you will be assigned to a unit. You will attend an in-house intel training school during your monthly drills. Your first year annual training duty will be to Basic Officer Training in Pensacola...it is the officer equivalent of boot camp and is affectionately known as "knife and fork school". Then, back to drill site to finish up the year of in house schooling. Once you finish that, you will be assigned an operational billet in the unit and work that job. Your next annual training will likely be to an intel unit or to the command that your reserve unit supports. The following year, you may want to attend a secondary intel training school. And so it goes.
Hope this helps. You can get direct commissions in other specialties, such as engineering officer or supply officer depending on your degree. Last I heard even the "boat drivers" (Line Officers) have a direct commissioning program. Talk to the local Reserve Officer Recruiter at the closest reserve center for up to date info.
Regards,
Lee '72
CAPT USN (Ret)