employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

US Marine Corps

Is this your company?

An unmatched life experience (good or bad). - E4 - Marines - Corporal US Marine Corps Employee Review

3.0
Jul 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great opportunity to have experiences that others pay to have, although your MOS (job) will dictate most of this. In 4 years I got to see over 14 countries, work with demolitions, ride in many helicopters and amphibious vehicles, and made friends who quickly became family. The discipline and hard work makes any job afterwards seem like a cakewalk.

Cons

The cons are vast on the enlisted side. To some people the Marine Corps may be thier best career choice but I would advise anyone with a better plan to get out after thier 4 years. 1. Your experience will be dictated tremendously by whomever is in charge of you. I got lucky with my leadership but I saw many good Marines whos life was made miserable simply because thier leadership was miserable. The longer you stay in the better chance you have of spending 3 years stuck in a situation like that. 2. The Marine Corps will always come first no matter how hard you try. A good leadership will allow you to leave work to for important personal things but if they want you there for something (often times for what seems like nothing) then you WILL be there. I am yet to be able to spend an anniversary or Valentine's day with my wife. 3. No matter how cool your job is it will quickly become mundane. At first my demolition ranges were the most exciting thing I had ever done. I never thought it could get old to blow things up all day in a field but there I was, sitting in a bunker while time fuse burnt, fantasizing about watching Law and Order with my wife. 4. At first your life will be micromanaged and then you will be expected to micromanage others. Your leadership is expected to advise you on every personal and financial choice you make. After that you will do the same for others and thier poor personal choices will be your responsibility. 5. Retention is at an all time low and good Marines are often times forced out due to a black and white system. I saw good Marines, who served frequently and honorably, not allowed to reenlist due to either technicalities or someone else's mistake. Also right now an NJP is pretty much a career ender. A 20 year old Marine, with 2 combat tours, causing no problems, can get caught drinking in the barracks which would get him an NJP. Now this small personal mistake will foreshadow his tremendous service to his country and the Marine Corps and his career will be haulted at that moment. 6. My biggest and most logical con is that the financial glass ceiling is very low. You will always make enough money to get by but never enough to become something bigger. If you plan to never get married then the money and lifestyle is not bad at all. Anyone who wants something bigger for thier family should look elsewhere. Even if the Marine Corps is your only route to college, and now you are 4 years deep in the Corps and 4 years behind the normal civilian track to success, and it seems like staying in makes the most sense at this point, your potential is still higher by getting out and going to school. If you did 4 years, got out, and went to school for 4 years, once that degree was done your starting salary at your job will probably be lower than the salary you would have had at your 8 year mark had you stayed in but your civilian career will quickly take you to beyond where the Marine Corps will. When you make the rank of SSGT most of your job is clerical anyway. You could be doing the same office work, with less hours and less stress, in the civilian world for more money.

Explore other reviews about US Marine Corps

5.0
Jul 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits Travel Culture Growth opportunity Meaning

Cons

Depending on the unit, culture can take a dark turn. The easiest way to mitigate this impression is to spend enough time to see multiple units.

3.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

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.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All