Benefits exceed the salary - Anonymous employee US Army Employee Review

4.0
8 Mar 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Your benefits include a housing allowance, sometimes a cost of living allowance, free healthcare (literally free, no charges for anything from prescriptions to checkups to surgeries), food allowance, and no state taxes for almost every state. Military benefits to include no state taxes make your true salary to about 20-30k more for single Soldiers or a lot more for anyone who has a spouse or children. More than 30 PTOs a year and lots of random days off.

Cons

Promotions are not based upon performance, but time in position. Therefore, you will not be rewarded for working hard. You will have to deal with deployments and time away from family. It is not a 9-5 job, but rather whenever you are needed so sometimes it is a 6am-5pm job, but other times it is 24/7 for weeks on end.

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5.0
16 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Get to travel a lot, pay was good

Cons

Work life balance was brutak

4.0
22 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pros: Working in the Army provides strong opportunities for leadership development, professional growth, and responsibility at an early stage. The organization builds discipline, accountability, resilience, and the ability to operate under pressure. It also offers stable pay, benefits, retirement opportunities, education benefits, healthcare, and access to advanced training. For individuals who want to lead teams, manage operations, solve complex problems, and serve a larger mission, the Army provides valuable experience that can transfer into civilian careers in operations, program management, training, logistics, compliance, security, and leadership.

Cons

Cons: The Army can be demanding because the mission often comes first, which can affect work-life balance, family time, and personal flexibility. Frequent changes in priorities, long hours, additional duties, administrative requirements, and high operational tempo can create stress and burnout. Career progression can also depend on timing, assignments, leadership, and organizational needs, not just individual performance. While the Army provides strong leadership experience, some military roles and accomplishments can be difficult to translate clearly to civilian employers without careful resume and profile wording.

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