Great experience as a junior officer, but can't take the bureaucracy! - Anonymous employee US Army Employee Review

3.0
Feb 21, 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will learn valuable leadership skills and you will constantly tested. Some opportunities to see the another country if the Army doesn't pull you somewhere they need you. The health insurance is nice and your housing allowing is respectable.

Cons

You will deploy and be away from for family for at least year. Very talented officers are leaving after their obligation is up because they are doing so many other things other than their normal job., i.e. dealing with the bureaucratic nonsense and added admin paperwork. You will be risking your life in combat. If your decisions aren't timely and accurate, then someone else's life may be at risk.

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5.0
Jun 10, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Its the army. Good is good

Cons

Its the army. Bad is really bad

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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