Garmin reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(1,859 total reviews)
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Clifton Pemble

75% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

Garmin has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 1,859 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Garmin employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Jun 18, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Just have to show up, do the bare minimum, and collect a paycheck (If you like that) Retirement and health insurance benefits are top of the industry

Cons

Brain drain (See all of the reasons below for why): Anyone talented and not from Kansas leaves pretty quickly. This leaves the people in charge as just the ones who stuck it out the longest and not actually the ones who are the best at what they do. The level 1 and 2s I work with are almost always more talented and engaging to work with than the senior and director levels I work with. Low pay and insultingly low raises: Even if you are a high performer your yearly pay raise will be below inflation. If you are an average performer you can expect 1-2%. This is all linked to a ridiculously unnuanced performance evaluation system. You have to live in Kansas: Not the worst place to live, but there is absolutely nothing to do here and you are not even within drivable distance of much, barring an extended weekend trip. Flights in and out are expensive so if you want to leave expect to spend minimum $400 anywhere. Good luck if you are young and single. KC is nowhere near the upcoming and trendy city they all want you to think it is and crime is pretty bad. HQ is also an hour outside the city with rush hour traffic anyways. Endless middle management with no ownership but limitless input: Too many middle managers who are solely in those positions due to time at the company and not for their competence. Because of this they all get to have some sort of opinion on everything regardless of whether or not the product is under their purview while simultaneously not having any ownership or responsibility of said product. Leads to endless design by committee, bureaucracy, and churn with unclear expectations. Nobody really cares and there is just a general acceptance of incompetence: There is this underlying culture of just show up and do the bare minimum. The lack of ownership of the products leads to an environment where incompetence is easy to hide and this just bleeds through the company. Any kind of innovation being pushed at lower levels is quickly quashed due to the middle management issues above. Nothing ever ships: So much of what you work on will never see the light of day, or if it does will be some half-baked, Frankenstein monster version of what you did because it got passed off to another team without you knowing a year later. Again due to many of the management issues listed above.

5.0
Jun 14, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Even before I was hired I was impressed at the amount of money Garmin spends on interns and potential new employees. They care about attracting the best people. Also really appreciated that the interview did not require memorizing leetcode solutions. I had a simple problem to solve and did not even entirely finish it—I just commented the rest of the solution to show what I was planning on doing. They mainly care that you talk through your solution aloud with them as you type it out. They want people with reasoning skills. When I joined I was surprised to learn many of my coworkers had joined as interns and never left. There are people who have been here for 20+ years. They're not unambitious, they just like the stability and compensation. No layoffs, people are only let go for performance reasons. Garmin's contract with Blue Cross Blue Shield includes a special customer service number that has people who are actually helpful on the other end. My coworkers are all so nice and extremely competent! We're discouraged from working more than 40 hours a week. The only time this has not applied was leading up to a big release, when we were asked to work 45 hrs/wk for a month or so. Only happened once so far in my 2 years here. That said, I'm on the embedded side and I understand the web devs sometimes have late nights due to their rolling release cycle. Work from home 2 out of 5 days a week is standard (more if you're sick or have some other good reason, less if you have to come in to use the hardware). Flex time is available. The only ask is you generally be available during core business hours, 9-4.

Cons

The salaries are not the highest but they're more than enough to live here. I consider it a tradeoff for the job security—they can afford to continue paying us all through economic downturns.

1.0
Mar 27, 2025

Good Team

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. No high press on work for SW 2. PM will be a manager than TL 3. Feel free to retire if your PM dont assagin any project to you

Cons

1. Salary is low 2. ESPP

Viewing 367 - 369 of 1,859 Reviews

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