Explore jobs
Find specific jobs
Explore careers
Explore professions
Best companies
Explore companies
To locate and destroy enemy ships and submarines.
In demand companies are hiring! Let Zippia apply for you!
Do you work at Us Navy?
Help job seekers learn about working at Us Navy
Based on 66 ratings
Travel and job training
Inefficiency typical of government bureaucracy
Comprehensive benefits package
Servant leaders
Reducing number of Sailors and investing more in the smaller pool of Sailors
It is very good
Very strong
Fulfilling mission objectives and building teams. Leveraging experiences and input from all members. Striving toward success in spite of challenges and often with limited resources.
Nice uniform. Guaranteed pay check.
Absolutely horrible life outside of work. Atrocious mandatory overtime. Forced sleep deprivation. Weak leadership.
Medical.
TO enable my self to increase the essence of patriotism in my country and world at all
citizenship certificate
to inrease my ability and more knowledge
to rule the people in right way
to inrease the efficiency and increasing morality of hard working
featness in physically,emotional and mentally
essence of patriotic
good
learning more and more efficiency
Mission-focused and enough structure to scale to nearly anything
Sometimes the structure for authority is misaligned with where responsibility should be, requiring needless coordination to do the job.
Traditional pension, and early and frequent management training
The camaraderie and work environment is phenomenal.
Healthcare, paid leave, and guaranteed work
I really enjoy that I get to change jobs with some regularity, getting to move each time to a more senior position.
I dislike the amount of time that I must spend away from my family.
I can retire with a lifelong pension after completing 20 years of service.
Working for the Navy as a Chaplain has been a blessing. The pay, healthcare, and family time is good.
The time I do have to travel away from my family.
The pay, healthcare, and time off. I like the people I work with. I like the challenges to start something new.
As a 19+ year veteran I've accumulated skills, experience and expertise that are variably incomparable while having unique opportunities travel and see the world. Currently, as a system modernization instructor, I've have been at forefront of the latest advancements in system development.
There have been times of prolonged intensive operations that can be demanding and stressful.
Full benefits for myself and my family which allow me to focus on my work.
Enjoy my job as a metal worker. Welding, brazing, pipe and ship fitting all Al fun.
Poor leadership and the lack of accountability for the poor leaders.
Paid no matter what on the 1st and 15th. Retirement plan is a great perk as well as health insurance.
The fact that I'm always learning something new about our job.
The people. I feel like it's a hostile working environment. Unless you have rank you can't defend yourself.
The experience getting to see things that no one else does or has. Getting to travel and see the world a little.
Opportunity to lead and mentor Sailors.
Deployments away from family.
Leave/vacation time.
What I enjoy most about being active duty navy is the opportunity to see the world and work with different nationalities through NATO.
There is a lot of competition with little growth to make rank within my rate.
Paid leave and health care
Structured environment.
Some of the worse leaders are found there.
The people and travel.
I loved being a Chief Operations Specialist
Sometimes long hours.
Retirement
the line of work and select few people i've met
everything else
the healthcare benefits
Service to country and retirement benefits. Travel to foreign lands to support the US Military mission to increase peace and safety worldwide.
The years spent away from family and friends. Time spent supporting wars did not meet future goals for the country.
Retirement pension and access to discounts based on honorable service.
I enjoyed the regularity in work schedule as well as the irregular
pay and benefits
Teamwork, Job security, the job itself.
Being away six plus months at a time
traveling, housing, medical
Serving my country and helping others.
Not a good chain of command
Free healthcare, secured pay on the first and 15th and free college.
The challenging work environment, the People, the compensation
Long hours
Travel
financial support and benefits, structure environment
inconsistent work, politics
free insurance
Benefits travel salary
Long time away from family frequent family movies
Traveling
On the job working experience with multiple systems pertaining to engineering, ordinance, navigation and others.
Being forward deployed for time periods of 8+ months.
Job satisfaction and working with amazing people.
Leadership opportunities and education programs that are little to no out of pocket costs.
Work life balance, very long hours, average of 65hrs per week. Understaffed across the Navy.
Pay
Benefits, travel, & work environment
Not enough pay for the work I do, inflexible schedule, & work environment
Free medical care
Agile workplace/ I get to manage and operate multi-million dollar resources/ Problematic Industry Compliance/ Good people to work with.
Time Away From Family
Retirement Benefit/ Travel/ Health Insurance/ Pay
The experience gained as a structural analyst is priceless.
They mistreat civilian employees when it comes to following through with initial offer agreements.
They have a decent 401K.
Us Navy is ranked #71 on the Biggest companies in America list. Zippia's Best Places to Work lists provide unbiased, data-based evaluations of companies. Rankings are based on government and proprietary data on salaries, company financial health, and employee diversity.
Evaluate Us Navy's commitment to diversity and inclusion.
Do you work at Us Navy?
Does Us Navy actively promote diversity and inclusion?
Claiming and updating your company profile on Zippia is free and easy.
Zippia gives an in-depth look into the details of Us Navy, including salaries, political affiliations, employee data, and more, in order to inform job seekers about Us Navy. The employee data is based on information from people who have self-reported their past or current employments at Us Navy. The data on this page is also based on data sources collected from public and open data sources on the Internet and other locations, as well as proprietary data we licensed from other companies. Sources of data may include, but are not limited to, the BLS, company filings, estimates based on those filings, H1B filings, and other public and private datasets. While we have made attempts to ensure that the information displayed are correct, Zippia is not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of this information. None of the information on this page has been provided or approved by Us Navy. The data presented on this page does not represent the view of Us Navy and its employees or that of Zippia.
Us Navy may also be known as or be related to US Navy, Us Navy and Department of the Navy.