NASA reviews

4.4

86% would recommend to a friend

(1,788 total reviews)
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Charles F. Bolden, Jr.

82% approve of CEO

58% positive business outlook

NASA has an employee rating of 4.4 out of 5 stars, based on 1,788 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The NASA employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Gobierno y administración pública industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Jun 7, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits - vacation time for federal workers can only be surpassed by banking industry, pension benefit at least for now, flextime, request for training usually granted if relation to work can be demonstrated Much flexibility in what projects employee supports - employees can actually say "no" to working on specific projects Access to Restone Arsenal technical library - has to be one of the best technical libraries in the world

Cons

Management and leadership deficit strongly apparent; center is directionless at the moment, at the whim of the government but also due to lack of vision in the agency overall and individual centers; work inertia is mind-numbing, entirely too long to produce meaningful results; meaningful work often times is elusive; too many levels of non-functioning management, most middle management and branch chief positions filled with political cronies - most lacking basic technical abilities; little to no incentive for many to be more innovative in how work is performed; No dual career path program, going into management is only way to climb to higher grades

1.0
Jan 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great mission. Public generally likes NASA, good branding and reputation. A lot of good, smart people who are enthusiastic about Space and really care about the Agency and mission.

Cons

Disclaimer: these are based on my experiences and observations, just like any large organization, experiences will vary depending on where in NASA you work and your role. Management and leadership not as good as I expected: They say they care about people, but actions haven’t reflected that in my experience. A lot of people are simply overworked. I’ve seen and experienced a fair amount of burnout in my time at NASA. Seems like everything is a priority which all must be done perfectly, done right now. Always looking for quick fixes/silver bullets to solve deep and complex organizational and culture issues. Unclear vision, expectations, and direction at various levels leads to a lot of rework/“bring a rock” and chaos/crisis management. The worst, most toxic supervisor I’ve had in my 20+ year career was at NASA, hands down. Numerous concerns and complaints about them were raised by team members and people from other organizations. Took a long time for leadership to address this, and too much damage done by the time they did. Budget: There never seems to be enough budget, which doesn’t help, but constantly hearing things like “do more with less”, “just do it!”, “just be more efficient” and “gotta get in the box”aren’t exactly inspirational, motivational, nor helpful. Culture: Organizations (directorates, programs, enterprise offices, centers, etc) and a lot of people seem to only care about themselves. Very siloed. Definitely felt a good old boys club vibe. Definitely not a diverse workforce, especially in management and leadership. Heard a lot of talk and saw plenty of performative/check the box type of actions around DEIA during the Biden Administration. Also, I’ve never seen the agency move so fast on anything after the order was issued to remove anything DEI from websites, contracts, workspaces, etc. Very resistant and sensitive to change. A lot of employees, managers, and leaders have been here for most of or all their entire careers. New ideas, outside perspectives, basically anything not “the NASA way” or “the way we’ve always done it” is met with a lot of resistance and harsh criticism. Workspaces are not modern: A lot of old and outdated facilities and infrastructure that’s definitely not in the best condition. Probably due to years of deferring maintenance to address other issues or buy new shiny things. The workspaces and systems are not as high tech as I expected. A lot of MS Excel and PowerPoint, and every organization seems to have their own management systems and tools.

1.0
Nov 5, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You can work on the same niche for your whole career

Cons

Too many people living off of brand name validation to do anything that actually makes a difference. Disgusting amount of employees that also use their workplace for personal clout: develop a hobby outside of your work personality please I'm begging y'all

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