Garmin reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(1,844 total reviews)
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Clifton Pemble

76% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

Garmin has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 1,844 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
1.0
Feb 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

As frustrated as I am at Garmin's outdated views on workplace culture, diversity, sustainability, work life balance etc. we do make wonderful products and even after I leave I will continue to buy and recommend our products.

Cons

After 5 years of hybrid work, the c suite made a baffling decision to enforce a RTO policy. There was no warning, leadership was not consulted. An email was sent out on a Thursday afternoon and that was that. The COO of our company, when asked about this in a town hall, had the audacity to state that other benefits would not be adjusted to compensate for this because Garmin didn't ask us to pay back money we saved on gas during the days we WFH. We are a company that makes products in Asia. My direct coworkers work 14 hours ahead of me. We have tons of remote sites I deal with over teams. Outside of lab work (which I have no issue with coming in to do) there is no reason for me to be at a desk talking to people over teams. This is clearly a decision that was made because the company overspent on renovations and property. Garmin has a reputation for poor salary, I knew this coming in but decided the other benefits made up for it. This was a mistake on my part, I will admit. Garmin leaders frequently joke about how you have to deal with a poor salary to work here, it is a huge red flag that everyone is aware of and does nothing about. Garmin sends out annual employee surveys and when we rank the benefits as low we are told that we are greedy and just want more money. This is Garmin culture on display. Garmin is clearly at a crossroads, it is no longer a startup but continues to promote itself as one both internally and externally, preaching flexibility and work life balance while at the same time stripping those things away from the people who actually make the products we sell. This is all topped off by 5 years of record profits, stock growth and brand market share, none of which have resulted in material benefits for the individual contributors, it just enriches the executives who continue to demand more from us while claiming we don't have the money for raises or to hire more people. I strongly believe these poor decisions by leadership are going to destroy this company. Let's talk about other problems at this company: There is no commitment to diversity, the executive leadership and most leadership in general is made up entirely of white people (mostly white men) and the staff reflects this. The maternity leave is horrendous, and this results in few working mothers, or women in general, being represented. Garmin loves to flaunt "other" benefits, like no dress code or discounted products, while every year they add more restrictions on this (dress code applies when a vendor visits, we now get 50% fewer discounted products). I will end with this. It is a new era of work, companies can either get with the times and flourish or chose not to and fail when their employees inevitable leave for greener pastures. I now know what Garmin plans to do and it is very disappointing.

1.0
Apr 1, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Garmin has a great leadership team and good work life balance (hours worked, not WFH). The leaders are all former engineers and understand the importance of the work. My peers and the engineers under us were all exceptional. The opportunity for movement was pretty good. Healthcare benefits are unmatched. If remote work didn't exist, Garmin would be the absolute best company to work for in KC. I would have never left if the pandemic and remote work didn't happen.

Cons

Garmin is basically the place you go as a software engineer when you're good enough to get in at a Tier 1 (google, msft, apple, etc) but need to live in Kansas City for whatever reason. The work is all the same difficulty, the expectations are the same, the interview process weeds out a vast majority of candidates... but there's a big difference. I moved from mid-100k as a team lead with 10+ years at Garmin (only some as manager) to mid-500k working for one of the big tech companies, working remotely from KS. In the time since I've left, I know multiple other managers (all with 10+ YOE at Garmin) who have quit as well to go to bigger tech companies. With such an enormous salary disparity and 5% raises trying to account for a 300-400% difference, Garmin will hemorrhage its top talent over the next couple years. Other small problems: ESPP is capped at 10% of cash salary instead of the real 25k IRS limit. Force ranking of teams for compensation. Very low diversity in software group. Very bad infra, awful build systems and lots of homebrew tooling. RSU compensation is a "secret", half of it is tied to company performance, and overall value of RSUs is very low. WFH policy is 2 days a week, but not actually flexible, just a checkbox to say it's offered. Growth is slow, so opportunities are reduced above front line team lead. Never saw a second line manager or above change positions in 5+ years. I'll acknowledge that the situation is very difficult since Garmin has competed in a much smaller software market up until Covid opened things up. This is a problem most tech companies outside SF, Seattle, Austin, and NYC will have to deal with.

1.0
Jun 11, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Give good benefits Used to have a good reputation

Cons

-- Talented and good employees are leaving because they are not managed/lead correctly. Yet, instead of acknowledging that, management constantly choose to blame those who leave. -- Conservative means not progressive, not open to new ideas/innovation, no employee development, training, low salary and increase, will not spend for anything even for things to support the success of projects/employees. -- Declining performance causes management to be more desperate and strict, yet normally management do not provide clear goals or vision. Therefore, project leads are often under many pressure and often punished for things that are not necessarily their mistakes. -- Many employees are unhappy, yet upper managements continue to keep their current style and process that continue to loose employees' trust and loyalty. -- Servant leadership is what was shared in many of the company's PR, but the real practices of HR and management do not project that at all. -- Organizational structure change constantly, and whenever this happens new management/leader of an area tends to promote people based on subjective reasons (instead of people's real contribution)

Viewing 7 - 9 of 1,844 Reviews

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