Great job with a sense of adventure, but not for everyone. - Surface Warfare Officer US Navy Employee Review

4.0
Feb 5, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Serving as a Surface Warfare Officer is a great job with a sense of mission accomplishment. Many opportunities exist for advancement and career development. Educational opportunities for master's degrees exist, but be prepared to sign up for additional years of service. You will have the chance to lead personnel from the start of your naval career and your responsibilities increase with rank. You will be advanced automatically for about the first 10 years of your service and then it will become competitive. The Navy offers a fantastic retirement plan and you will receive your monthly payments starting immediately after you serve 20 years of service. Get commissioned at age 21 and retire at 41 and start earning your retirement payments. A great deal! Plus you get to travel the world and see some great countries.

Cons

Prepare to deploy and be at sea for extended periods of time. Limits and places a strain on your family and social life. It is very difficult to find a balance between your personal and professional life. Many officers are able to achieve this, but it is a difficult task. Long working hours and work on weekends are the norm depending upon your billet. If you are at an operational command (ship or submarine), expect long hours and prepare to deploy for at least 4-6 months out of each year. Also be prepared to deploy to war zones (Iraq, Afghanistan, Africa, Kuwait) to support the Army, Marines and Air Force on the ground.

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5.0
Nov 22, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Job satisfaction with your contribution to our nation's defense.

Cons

Instability in location and the resource constraints that are produced by government funding.

3.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You get real leadership experience that is hard to match in the civilian world. You are trusted with people, aircraft, weapons systems, safety, compliance, inspections, training, and mission execution. That responsibility builds confidence fast. The job gives you strong technical credibility, especially if you come up through aviation ordnance, maintenance, QA, CDQAR, instructor duty, or airworthiness roles. You learn how to manage risk, enforce standards, and make decisions when the pressure is high. There is a lot of pride in the work. You are part of something bigger than yourself, and when the team performs well, you know your leadership had a direct impact. The Navy also gives you structure, benefits, retirement options, medical coverage, education benefits, and long-term career stability if you can handle the lifestyle. For someone who wants to grow into quality assurance, safety, compliance, program management, aerospace, defense, or manufacturing leadership, the experience translates well. You leave with strong skills in audits, corrective actions, training, documentation, inspections, risk management, and leading large teams.

Cons

The workload can be brutal. Long hours, nights, weekends, deployments, duty days, short-notice tasking, and constant operational pressure can wear you down over time. Work-life balance is often poor, especially in senior enlisted leadership. You are expected to take care of your people, meet the mission, answer for mistakes, and still keep up with admin, training, inspections, and readiness requirements. The stress level can be very high. Aviation ordnance and QA-related work do not leave much room for error. Mistakes can affect safety, careers, and mission success, so the pressure is constant. There can be a lot of bureaucracy. Good leaders spend a lot of time fighting outdated processes, unclear direction, last-minute changes, and administrative requirements that do not always add value. Promotion and recognition are not always tied to actual performance. Politics, timing, collateral duties, command climate, and who is writing your eval can matter more than they should. The physical and mental toll is real. Years of high tempo work, deployments, inspections, pressure, and lack of sleep can catch up with you, especially after retirement or transition to civilian life.

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