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Lowe's Home Improvement

Engaged Employer

Lowe's Home Improvement reviews

3.5

61% would recommend to a friend

(47,872 total reviews)
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Marvin Ellison

67% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Lowe's Home Improvement has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 47,872 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Lowe's Home Improvement employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Ventas al mayoreo y al menudeo industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

48K reviews
3.0
Aug 27, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great pay and bonus structure, but if you get put in a no-bonus store you may be screwed for a year (until you can turn the store around). There are a lot of great people working at Lowe's. Some store management teams are incredibly strong. The good teams are aggressive, sales-oriented, customer focused, and want to win.

Cons

There are huge variances in the ways HR policies are administered from store to store, and from district to district. It doesn't matter how good you are, if you get on the wrong persons black list they will "find a reason to get rid of you". I have seen it too many times in my store and especially in my district. It all depends on the management team at your store on who your district manager is. There is a wide range in district managers. Some of them are among the very best leaders that I have ever worked for, On the other hand, some are absolute tyrants. One of the DMs in Dallas thinks that the phrase "hold someone accountable" means to scream obscenities at them on the sales floor in front of store associates (hourly AND salaried) and in front of customers. He has even gone as far as throwing items at managements team members in several stores. It is amazing that a grown man of 60 years can get away with acting like this in public. It is even more amazing that he is allowed to act this way while representing Lowe's as a district manager overseeing a district with sales well over $250M a year. There is no accountability here. If you question his behavior to other management you are told "that's just the way that he is". If you push the issue, you will find your job threatened.

1.0
Oct 13, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great people. Not much else.

Cons

This is a Fortune 100 company, but you wouldn’t know it from the way it treats its employees. Leadership recently mandated a five-day in-office workweek for all corporate staff, ignoring the fact that most companies in this industry and in general now operate on hybrid schedules. The CEO likes to say “there are no cash registers at corporate,” a comment that alienates the very people keeping the company running. In reality, computers and iPhones are modern registers, and e-commerce is how many customers shop today. Moreover, corporate employees chose professional careers, not cashier jobs. They went to college, many earned advanced degrees, and pursued careers as knowledge workers. Comparing these roles to hourly retail work is insulting. Will the next VP of Finance really be plucked from behind a register? According to the CEO’s rhetoric, it’s all the same. Dismissing corporate contributions in this way only reinforces how little leadership understands the evolving retail landscape and further underscores their dismissal of the very real differences between corporate and retail associates. Benefits are just as outdated, salaries are well below market, and time off is appalling low. Corporate employees receive just two paid holidays per year, a policy far behind other Fortune 500 companies and completely out of touch with worker expectations. Similar sized companies in this industry provide at least the bare minimum of 6, with most granting 8-12 paid holidays. Corporate employees are required to work on New Year’s Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day unless they use vacation time or one of their four floating holidays. Those “floating” days seem designed to offset what most employers provide as standard paid holidays, effectively leaving employees with no true floating holidays or flexibility. It’s a clear signal that leadership places little value on work-life balance or family time. Add to that a refusal to offer even hybrid work options, and you have a leadership team and CEO who are completely out of touch with the modern workforce, the emerging workforce. evolving expectations, and basic corporate fixed holiday norms. And these aren’t just any holidays: they’re some of the most meaningful, family-centered days in American life. The CEO recently stated outright he doesn’t care about associates' work-life balance. Combined with his reliance on a small circle of C-suite yes-men, this has created a culture of alienation and resentment across the corporate workforce. Leadership knows it, yet chooses to ignore it. This strategy is also short-sighted. Gen Z (the very audience the company claims to target) values hybrid work, flexibility, time off, and leaders who understand modern consumer behavior. Dismissing this outright will make it nearly impossible to recruit or retain the next generation of talent. This is no longer a company for the long term. If you need a paycheck, fine. But if you want your education respected, your contributions valued, and leadership that genuinely cares about your time and your ability to spend it with family on major holidays, your health, and your growth, you’d be wise to look elsewhere.

2.0
Mar 26, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Health Insurance 401K Training Diverse work environment Different tasks and customers made the job not repetitive / not dull

Cons

- Employee injuries were common due to the heavy and bulky products which are stocked and loaded on the carts for costumers - little communication about coworkers / one employee passed out in the garden center one year due to heat stroke and ended up dying. They didn't bother closing the store, or telling all the employees that worked there that soemone had died that day! They didn't pass around a card for people to sign ; or share obituary/ funeral details ect. None of the managers seemed to care. - Lots of toxic chemicals and Hazmat cleanup is a joke there. Not enough training on how to handle chemical spills; and how to deal with acid burns. Luckily they have a hazmat hotline on the phones which came in handy one time when I was putting away drain cleaner and one of the bottles had a leak . The acid from the drain cleaner hurt me a bit but i was able to get a hold of the hazmat helpline right away and they helped - One time rats died in the cieling above the restrooms by the breakroom. It smelled real bad for a week until the past control person fished the dead rats out ; made going to the breakroom and restroom unbearable due to the smell

Viewing 100 - 102 of 47,872 Reviews

Glassdoor has 49,379 Lowe's Home Improvement reviews submitted anonymously by Lowe's Home Improvement employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Lowe's Home Improvement is right for you.