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General Atomics

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General Atomics reviews

3.9

72% would recommend to a friend

(1,971 total reviews)
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Neal Blue

78% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

General Atomics has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,971 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The General Atomics employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aeroespacial y defensa industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Jul 10, 2025

Horrible work life balance, long hours, little PTO

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great teammates, no pressure, somewhat flexible schedule

Cons

I’m genuinely puzzled by the praise General Atomics receives for its work-life balance (WLB). In my experience, the WLB is actually quite poor. While the company touts a 9/80 schedule as a perk, the reality is that you’re trading slightly fewer workdays for consistently long, 9.5-hour days. That extra half hour includes a mandatory 30-minute unpaid break, which must be taken within a tightly enforced window. You can’t skip it or shift it to a time that better suits your needs—even if you’re fasting, on a special diet, or simply not hungry. In effect, the company dictates when you eat, with no flexibility. Time off is another major downside. Vacation and sick leave are drawn from the same PTO bank, and accrual is painfully slow. You start with 120 hours per year, which is advertised as “15 days,” but that’s misleading. Since most workdays are 9 hours long, you’re actually only getting about 13 full days off per year. If you get sick, say goodbye to your vacation. The list of company-paid holidays is outdated and lacking. There’s no recognition for MLK Day, Juneteenth, or Indigenous Peoples’/Columbus Day. Worse, when holidays fall on a scheduled off Friday (as the 4th of July did this year), there’s no make-up holiday granted. Many companies offer at least a partial paid shutdown between Christmas and New Year’s, but not General Atomics—you’ll need to dip into your already limited PTO to spend time with your family during school breaks. In short, the benefits may look decent on paper, but the reality is rigid scheduling, limited time off, and an overall lack of flexibility or consideration for employees’ personal needs.

2.0
Dec 6, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Surrounded by newer employees that have great ideas and could really make GA a great company.

Cons

Top leadership at GA will not allow any change. Every aspect is very unnecessarily political and old school. Managers get the high salaries, big bonuses and training to better themselves but never share it with the people that actually do the work. Long hours, pitiful wages and mediocre bennies. No opportunity for advancement unless you are a white man.

2.0
Oct 20, 2021

One-trick Pony

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This company came up with and still makes predator drones, which does raise its cool factor. Also, I'm pretty sure it's the same General Atomics in Fallout 4. So, I guess some people get a kick out of being around military stuff, without actually risking their lives. Too bad that drone is becoming their one-and-only trick. Their pay is low but they do have pretty good work-life balance and they offer a pension plan. This attracts a lot of semi-retired engineers. If you are a junior engineer, this is a good start, but I would turn and burn ASAP; the old tech will hold you back. They will get you a national security clearance if that floats your boat.

Cons

* If you like cube farms and traveling to the desert and other wastelands, then apply. * Their tech is 20 years old; they still use manual testers and dev ops is a human process; i.e. there is no such thing CI/CD here. I want to say that the majority of their engineers are semi-retired and don't even know what AWS is. * Their methodology is nowhere near Agile. Their software has a ton of technical debt. They put performance and quality last. * Their project managers walk around like they're rock stars. They always complain about the quality of the software but never want to fund regression or performance testing. * There's a lot of UCSD influence here; i.e. they get a kick out of C++ and look down on web technologies and other "script kiddies". Modern UI frameworks like React or Angular are almost unheard of here.

Viewing 19 - 21 of 1,971 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,262 General Atomics reviews submitted anonymously by General Atomics employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if General Atomics is right for you.