Intuit reviews

4.2

82% would recommend to a friend

(11,760 total reviews)
avatar

Sasan Goodarzi

78% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

Intuit has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 11,760 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Intuit employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

12K reviews
2.0
May 7, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• In certain teams, especially where managers lead with empathy and clarity, the culture can be strong and supportive. These environments exist and offer a healthy, productive space. If you are considering a role, learning about your future manager and their leadership style is essential before accepting any offer. • The vacation policy is generous, and for those who manage to find a balanced workload, it allows for meaningful rest and recovery. • Visibility and ownership are highly rewarded. Individuals who take initiative, lead cross-functional efforts, and make their work known often advance faster. While this promotes leadership, it can sometimes come at the expense of collaborative engineering culture, which is a big risk!!! • Facilities and infrastructure are excellent. The offices are well-equipped and comfortable for both hybrid and in-person work models. • The technical ecosystem includes many microservices and large-scale challenges. Engineers working on the core systems will find opportunities to solve complex problems and grow in scale-oriented thinking.

Cons

• The work culture has become increasingly high-pressure and performance-driven. In some environments, this has led to internal competition, reduced collaboration, and a noticeable increase in political behavior. • Leadership turnover and structural shifts have impacted team stability. Several employees have described a cultural shift that no longer reflects the company’s original values. • Based on my experience, many of the concerns raised in internal feedback surveys are not directly addressed. Employees are often left feeling unheard when ineffective leadership is allowed to persist without meaningful action. • While headquarters in the US has been a strong force behind Intuit’s global success, communication gaps and lack of local visibility have contributed to misalignment at the Israel site. • Compensation packages in Israel are positioned below many comparable companies in the region. For some, this is offset by stability and benefits. For others, it creates a mismatch with market expectations. • In several teams, the on-call demands are intense, with limited safeguards for maintaining work-life balance. This can lead to prolonged periods of stress and burnout if not well managed. • Internal misalignment and management conflicts sometimes delay execution. Engineers may find themselves navigating unclear priorities or conflicting directions from leadership. • Layoffs, though framed as strategic, have at times included high-performing individuals. I personally experienced one of these events, and I know many colleagues who were deeply affected. The communication surrounding these layoffs left many with a sense of confusion and disappointment. • Global support structures can be difficult to work with due to timezone limitations and response delays. This has a tangible impact on delivery speed and team velocity. • Engineers are sometimes evaluated based on factors outside of their control, such as cross-team blockers or organizational inefficiencies. This can negatively affect performance reviews and career growth despite an engineer’s best efforts.

1.0
Mar 20, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Since work here will be your hobby, you can try to go professional in your hobbies..

Cons

The company actually has no work, most teams are just tearing down perfectly working services to recreate the same. The teams mostly consists of people impersonating "Software Engineers" who have mastered their political skills. Make sure that you are good with praising everyone. All teams consists of someone who is a myth, a legend and are used to hearing that a lot even during lunch. Thats the only way to survive, when I quit after only 4 months my manager asked if I was laid of from the previous company and tried finding some reason other than what I mentioned as being no work. With the introduction of pip culture, the middle managers are hiring to fire so that they can protect their loved ones. Please run away.

avatar
Intuit Response
1y
Thank you for taking the time to leave a review regarding your experiences here. We are sorry to learn that your time here wasn’t the positive one that we strive to provide for all employees. We take all feedback seriously and will be sharing yours with our People Experiences team. Thank you again for taking the time to provide your input and for the time you spent with us.
1.0
Mar 13, 2025

100% Chaos, Uncertainty, and Stress

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Manager and team are kind, respectful, and easy to get along with. The things related to actual income tax is interesting (but those are rare questions. More often than not, you are expected to be a computer technology specialist).

Cons

I challenge you to do & read everything they expect of you without working off the clock. Half hour worth of opening screens, and reading updates, changes, tech issues, just one more thing they want, etc. before you're ready to set yourself to "available." They give you 10 minutes to do all those tasks. Frequently, there's even a survey pop-up that blocks your screen when you try to check in so you can't check in without answering or clicking out of it. They'll steal every cent they can. At the end of the day, clock out, THEN review and submit your time sheet, THEN clear cache & cookies--all off the clock. Training takes twice as long as they pay for. New training keeps coming in and they prefer you to try to take it while taking calls. They almost always significantly underestimate time required, so I guess you're just supposed to click thru without reading and play the videos on double time (where that option is available). Do not expect to absorb learning that way. If you can talk with a customer who's jabbering with you, while trying to read and analyze their tax return using a tiny piece of a screen shot while customer is wriggling the mouse (and the screen you're trying to read) all over the place WHILE reading and interpreting tax law, or much worse, figure out their technology problem to the level of teaching them how to use their own computer sometimes--all with little to no instruction--you'll love it. Recruiters tell you if you work a certain # of hours and days and meet quality standards you'll get a big bonus. Here's the thing about quality standards: If a customer called two, three, or more times before getting you, they can tell you that you're wonderful and the smartest person they talked to, but they still will give you a low score because the Turbo Tax system gave them so much grief. They can write wonderful things about how fantastic you are in the narrative part of the survey, but if they don't give you a 9 or 10 in every area (including & especially, "would you recommend Turbo Tax?" you're screwed. Any survey score less than 9 (no matter how much they sing your praises in the narrative) isn't just averaged--no--It's like getting a negative 5 in how they add up the numbers. I think it takes ten 10's to make up for one less- than-8. It doesn't matter that you were on the top of your game, you solved their problem and they loved you. It doesn't even matter if their problem was a result of the system not working. And that, Ladies and Gentlemen, is how they will cheat you out of your bonus. They expect you will learn as you go and they are very encouraging if you are struggling with an issue. But the sinister, greedy part of Intuit is that getting the bonus is out of your control until you have a few years of training & experience to know all the ins and outs that you can ONLY LEARN THROUGH LOTS OF EXPERIENCE. That is how they really expect you to learn and they aren't shy about saying so. No training simulators or any way to learn except working through problems with customer and going through the screens. Wage theft at its finest.

Viewing 415 - 417 of 11,760 Reviews

Glassdoor has 14,349 Intuit reviews submitted anonymously by Intuit employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Intuit is right for you.