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US Marine Corps

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Great camaraderie and benefits, but tough work-life balance - USMC Naval Aviator US Marine Corps Employee Review

4.0
May 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Camaraderie - you will never work with a better group of people than the ones you meet in your unit. 2. Fringe benefits - 30 days of paid leave earned per year, tuition assistance to attend college while on active duty, full medical and dental coverage, housing (barracks, base housing, or in town depending on rank and marital status), veteran's benefits when you discharge, and the list goes on. 3. Travel - while serving, I have lived in five states, seven cities, been to nine states for training, deployed to or been in nine countries for training or operations, been underway on a ship, and have more on the horizon. 4. Fitness - you are required to maintain a high degree of physical fitness. You'll see friends from high school and college add weight as years go by, but you don't have a choice in that. Keeping fit is part of your job. 5. Training - not only the skills you'll learn that can translate into civilian jobs later. You'll learn how to apply lifesaving first aid, survive in the water while wearing heavy gear, navigate with a map and compass, to use weapons, martial arts, and tons of additional courses if you seek them out and ask (rescue swimming techniques, rappelling, pack animals, etc.) it just depends what you want to do.

Cons

1. It can be difficult to balance the demands of the work with your personal life and personal obligations. If you're stationed away from where you grew up, you will not come back very often. You'll miss some holidays, weddings, birthdays, funerals, all the stuff people normally come together for. 2. Hours - you'll generally spend a few weeks at a time in the field, work a few weekends, stand duty (basically phone watch and security) at your unit on a 24 hour shift about once per month. The work days can get long depending what your job is and what your unit is doing. A regular day is still eight hours but it's not uncommon to stay for anywhere from 10-14 hours if something important is happening. 3. It will eventually take a toll on your body. I'm still relatively young and have some aches and pains that I wasn't expecting for another 15-20 years. Lesson there - push your body, but listen to it at the same time. Take recovery seriously.

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5.0
Jun 30, 2026
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Pros

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Cons

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3.0
Jun 24, 2026
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Pros

In no particular order: Pay and benefits, especially dental and medical, which if one's spouse has private insurance basically mean no medical, dental, or vision expenses for children. The base housing is the last of the true suburbs with children playing everywhere, grocery and convenience store shopping, and gyms within walking distance. A variety of duty and business trip locations worldwide. A great feeling of really serving one's country, until you realize "war is a racket", and then more introspection, and again feeling great about serving one's country. If one chooses their occupational specialty correctly, a civilian career can follow seemlessly, and if not, the Veteran's Administration can assist with retraining and transition.

Cons

Again, in no particular order, the food provided by the government is often unhealthy and gross, so you have to focus on nutrition. Trying to get travel claims and other reimbursements can be tedious. Experiencing physical and psychological terror. Boredom, no, ennui, to the point where the movie "Brazil" is like your "Office Space", as you find escapist amusement in your thoughts-- hyper sanity. Getting addicted to the adrenaline produced in reaction to one's service, and the behavioral/epigenetic changes it causes. Endless waiting. Serving with criminals, psychopaths, and sociopaths who thrive in war zones as fish swim in the sea. The military justice system which can be unethically applied, but I suppose the civilian justice system is also vulnerable to corruption. It's a people business, so if you don't like being in a childish fraternity, this "job" probably isn't for you. Getting attacked by other service members, because they are violent people, duh.

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