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US Postal Service

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US Postal Service reviews

2.8

32% would recommend to a friend

(19,459 total reviews)

Louis DeJoy

17% approve of CEO

27% positive business outlook

US Postal Service has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 19,459 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The US Postal Service employee rating is 20% below average for employers within the Transportation & Logistics industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

19K reviews
5.0
Mar 5, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I enjoyed the independent nature of the rural carrier job. Also liked that I was responsible for a definitive amount of work (didn't have to take up the slack for people not doing their job as I had in past jobs). Liked the mixture of physical, mental, and organizational skills needed for the job.

Cons

There will always be a few incompetent people in the wrong positions. This is true of every company and every workplace. The Post Office is particularly bad at weeding the deadbeats out.

4.0
Mar 3, 2010

USPS career

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you are seeking a way to pay the rent, put bread on the table, have acsess to medical care, save a bit for retirement, and take a vacation or two per year with holidays, the postal service is a great place to work. Entry level on the job training is a great opportunity for a person who may not have the benefits of a college education but who can still earn a realistic living wage in today's challenging economy. They also provide very reasonable life insurance, access to low interest loans, options to credit union memberships and union craft memberships with representation for all.

Cons

But, unless you are hired with educational degrees and recomendations, you will most likely remain in an entry level position thoughout your entire career. Step increases in salary over a 15 year period ensure you can continue with a living wage, but that is all. The stability and benefits of the position are a trade off to potential meaningful earning in comparison to the same time spent in other careers. There are no more salary increases after 15 years. Your remaining annual earnings the rest of your career is a flat line, with only the added benefit of more vacation time. Perhaps the reason is the work can be intermitently physical demanding and damaging, even in the clerk craft, causing mucule strain and joint injury far more common in postal workers. Early retirement seems to be encouraged often with "early out" incentives. The work can be mundane and repetitive. The opportunity from the lower ranks to rise to a supervisor position is competitive, fierce, and often cut throat. Some workers will go to any lengths to be taken under the wing of an existing manager in order to be sponsored into the management program. And some managers will take advantage of their all too willing subordinates for their own personal motives.

4.0
Feb 21, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working as a letter carrier is a stable, well paying career. While it is difficult to get hired to the Postal Service, should you have the opportunity, it's one to seize.

Cons

Unfortunately, there is a lot lacking in the quality of and leadership abilities of management personnel. It's also an immensely physically tasking job.

Viewing 19375 - 19377 of 19,459 Reviews

Glassdoor has 20,908 US Postal Service reviews submitted anonymously by US Postal Service employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if US Postal Service is right for you.