An honest review - Mechanical Design Engineer Curtiss-Wright Employee Review

2.0
Aug 17, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent base pay, health insurance and 401k match. The product is cool but the excitement wears off quickly. This is a very stable industry with lots of job security. Excellent work life balance. The pace is slow, so the job is fairly low stress. The work is meaningful.

Cons

The security protocols in place create many road blocks, making it unnecessarily difficult to do your job effectively. Inovation and creativity are squashed here, despite what the CEO preaches from afar. No one has the ability to ever work from home. The job is very tedious and monotonous. The pace is SLOW with random urgency thrown in at times for unnecessary things. There is no training program for any department. Changing roles in the company is difficult to do, so personal growth is challenging. Workload is not evenly distributed at all.

Explore other reviews about Curtiss-Wright

5.0
Jun 9, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Staff appreciate the job stability, good pay/benefits relative to the Aerospace & Defense industry, and highly professional engineering teams. Many report a strong sense of purpose and trust in their immediate colleagues.

Cons

On the downside, some reviewers cite a top-heavy, process-oriented management structure, occasional disjointed communication across departments, and strict, high-pressure deadlines.

1.0
Jul 15, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Brand recognition, Curtiss-Wright has lots of locations you can choose from, I get to travel and see parts of the USA

Cons

Having worked here for a relatively short period of time, my impression is that the onboarding and integration experience for new employees could be significantly improved. In the engineering department, new team members may find it difficult to establish themselves due to a culture and one particular difficult senior employee on the team that can feel unwelcoming and, at times, overly hierarchical. There appears to be a strong reliance on one specific long-tenured employee in engineering, which can make it challenging for newer staff to voice concerns, contribute new ideas, or receive consistent support. Expectations are often high, and work-life balance can be difficult to maintain during busy periods. Another area for improvement is the visibility and accessibility of HR. A stronger on-site HR presence could help employees feel more supported and provide a clearer avenue for addressing workplace concerns and improving communication. From conversations with current and former employees, I frequently heard that the culture was stronger when the company operated more like a family-run organization. Whether or not that perception is accurate, there is a noticeable desire among employees for a more collaborative, supportive, and people-focused environment.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All