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Navy Federal Credit Union

Engaged employer

Collaborative culture with slow decision-making processes - Sr.Principal Security Architect Navy Federal Credit Union Employee Review

5.0
17 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people and a collaborative work environment. The organization promotes a healthy work-life balance with standard eight-hour workdays and minimal expectations for overtime or weekend work. Employees benefit from generous vacation allowances and company holidays, along with extensive opportunities for professional training, skill development, and career advancement.

Cons

Decision-making and organizational processes can be deliberate, which may result in longer timelines for approvals and project execution. The organization operates within a well-defined management structure, with established reporting lines and a clear chain of command.

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Navy Federal Credit Union Response
2w
Thank you for taking the time to write a review. We appreciate your feedback.

Explore other reviews about Navy Federal Credit Union

5.0
1 Jul 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great work-life balance. Great benefits- 7% 401K match, 3% pension, $1K HSA match. 4 weeks vacation and 2 weeks sick leave. Discounted rate on mortgage or auto loan. Company really values tenure and employee retention. Hybrid schedule with 3 times a week for people leaders, 2 times a week for individual contributors.

Cons

Ver relationship-based. If you can't network, you likely won't have much upward mobility. Can be bureaucratic depending on your leadership.

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Navy Federal Credit Union Response
9h
Thank you for taking the time to write a review. We are glad to hear you have had such a great experience!
2.0
16 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay can be decent at times Met some great people

Cons

Processors are the garbage can of the entire loan process. We literally are help to such insane standards with no support. Apparently it’s been this way for years and even high ranking supervisors say they feel like they’re talking to a brick wall when they voice our frustrations. Since my time here that have been at least 2 employees that I’ve heard of that have either attempted jumping off our building or actually did jump off. Like how can you not implement change when people are so stressed that they are jumping off our buildings? If anyone is reading this and wondering how the stress gets that bad it’s because the better you do the more money you get but they keep raising the bar so when you’re use to that extra income and now you have to do so much more to get that extra income that you’re used to it can break a person down and higher ups know how bad we’re breaking down. It’s completely normal for a half hour workforce to go on mental health leave during the summer which is our busy season and still nothing is done. I haven’t even been here a full year. What is it going to take to actually implement a change?

3
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