US Army reviews

3.9

71% would recommend to a friend

(779 total reviews)
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Robert

67% approve of CEO

59% positive business outlook

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779 reviews

Reviews about "Diversity & Inclusion"

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1.0
Apr 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Standard work/life balance with weekends and holidays off. Vacation time is decent and sick time accrues.

Cons

Working for the federal government has got worse and worse over the years particularly recently, as can be seen by the hardships federal employees have been experiencing from terminations to being forced back to an office. We don't make what private sector employees make and we do to help create a better country. Our raises have been awful and not making up for inflation so if you come to the government expect to make less and less each year. If you get fired or let go, you can throw all the time and money away you put into the pension. The benefits used to be good, but now the little raise we get each year goes to the increase in the healthcare benefits. The vision and dental are 100% paid for by the employee with 0 government contribution. There is a fairly standard 5% TSP/401k match. My suggestion for all is don't come here, run fast especially if you are young. Go work hard in the private sector and contribute the extra dollars you save from paying the pension contribution to your 401k. We self fund the pension like social security. If you die there is little benefit. 401k is the way to go if you are a motivated investor. The environment here has been getting worse and worse. It is toxic and people now live in fear always waiting to get closer to retirement age in a cubicle. Don't live your life like this. Management tries to sell and brainwash you into thinking you are doing something good when they continue to cut and bypass regulation that protects individuals. Don't even come to the federal government and if you must, don't go to the DoD. It is by far one of the worst agencies. Many are not on the GS scale and have less job protections and are not allowed to unionize. They expect you to work after hours and on days off and mark this against you if you don't. They expect you to be available all the time and respond quickly on your personal phone. This is not how the government used to be run so you might as well do the same for a real company that pays you for the same expectation. The NH pay scale is built to be discriminatory and pass better raises to favorites not necessarily high performers. The NH pay scale is done by ranking and filling employees from 1 to .... Please take my advice. I wish someone told me 20 years ago.

2.0
Apr 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Health Care and Dental are taken are of - Many opportunities to advance in pay, but level of responsibility follows - A tremendous load of education, certifications, and college incentives that many other professions cannot match - Access to dietitians and fitness experts/ coaches free of charge

Cons

- severely poor lower level of mid-level leadership/ mentorship - upper echelon level directors and supervisors mostly concerned for themselves or just "going along" with the status of not caring about the impact on lower echelon personnel....Just get the mission done/ completed so that "I can get rewarded" - many high level executive preach about care, moral, and welfare of their hardworking employees, but at times NEVER consider that people make small mistakes and it is true that some new employees are still adjusting to a structured adult lifestyle/ profession - fairness with levels of punishment based on infractions or misconduct are NEVER faced with the same level of punishment, meaning senior level executives/ managers are many times given a simple written reprimand or verbal warning versus strict and severe levels of punishment according to military standards in actuality to what is written (according to military regulations/ laws) as actual - Nepotism and favoritism runs ramped through out various organizations - supervisors, directors, and executives, NOT ALL of them that are responsible for mentoring, teaching, and leading personnel making decisions based on their emotions instead of how the regulations state you are to lead troops - A culture of "everyone is a winner", most employees today think they deserves an award for doing their job when training is conducted offsite instead of doing something outside or beyond your scope of duties

5.0
Apr 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

os: The Army develops leaders in ways most organizations simply cannot replicate. Over a 24-year career, I was entrusted with managing multi-million dollar inventories, leading diverse teams under high-pressure conditions, and executing complex logistics operations across CONUS and deployed environments — including combat zones. The training pipeline is world-class, and the institution genuinely invests in your development at every rank. Benefits are exceptional: comprehensive healthcare, retirement pension, education assistance (tuition assistance and GI Bill), and a built-in network of professionals who share your values. The sense of mission and belonging is unmatched. I was part of something bigger than a bottom line.

Cons

Cons: Work-life balance can be a real challenge, especially at junior enlisted ranks and during deployments — the Army's needs always come first, and your personal schedule is secondary to the mission. Frequent PCS (Permanent Change of Station) moves can strain family stability and make long-term community roots difficult to maintain. Bureaucracy and slow institutional change can be frustrating, particularly when you can clearly see a better way to accomplish a task. Transitioning out after a long career also requires significant personal initiative — the civilian world speaks a very different language, and translating military experience takes real effor

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