EY reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(83,904 total reviews)
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Janet Truncale

79% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

EY has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 83,904 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The EY employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzen industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

84K reviews
3.0
Aug 17, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Typical benefits of a consulting firm 1. Personal growth - you will learn A LOT. Client management, how to run projects, how to manage risks and issues, presentation skills. Your team & your bosses will guide you every step of the way. Everything you do (especially if you are junior) will be reviewed by a senior, a manager, a director and in some cases, a partner. 2. Competitive increment - if you are not incompetent and show signs of growth, you will definitely get a grade bump (your grade will increase e.g. from SA 2 to SA 3) and the progression comes with a really good increment (20-30%). Promotion from SA to manager is slightly harder - but if you're not incompetent and meet/exceed expectations, it's definitely easier than other companies. Thats why you will meet 26-27 year old managers (and a lot of them are very smart and competent)

Cons

1. No WLB. Going home at 7pm is early. Taking leave can be difficult. Holidays need to be planned a year ahead. 2. You will not have a lot of (if any) control what you will be specializing in. Depending on what clients / projects require resources, you will be thrown into those projects. You're not interested in the industry / project? Too bad so sad. 3. Depending on your team - bosses can be relentless. Some bosses will not be kind to you for making mistakes. Can be disheartening getting yelled at / insulted for presentation slide that can be fixed in 15 mins. 4. It is a client-facing role - ultimately the client makes the decision. You will find yourself doing things that sometimes don't make business sense. But it's what the client wants! 5. Some teams will speak in Mandarin during meetings, etc. May be exclusionary for those who can't speak Mandarin. 6. Bonus is really bad.

1.0
May 4, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Teams are filled with smart, resilient people who quietly support each other through the chaos. Remote work is allowed, and salaries are paid on time. Exposure to large clients in banking, telecoms, and the public sector. You’ll learn how complex organizations operate.

Cons

I came in optimistic, thinking I’d found a career launcher. I left mentally and emotionally exhausted. EY Greece may look elite from the outside, but behind the logo is a reality where burnout is normalized, leadership is mostly absent, and your value is tied to your obedience, not your talent. Chronic overwork, unpaid and expected: Long hours are the rule, not the exception. Overtime is often implied, not acknowledged — and certainly not compensated. If you try to set boundaries, you're seen as not “committed.” Disorganized delivery and shifting scope: Project plans are mostly sales-driven, not technically feasible. You’re handed broken scopes and told to “make it happen.” Developers and junior consultants carry the weight of promises made by people who won’t stay to help. Toxic favoritism and career stagnation: Promotions are political. If you’re well-aligned with upper management, you’ll rise. If you’re competent but quiet, you’ll stay put. Recognition is uneven at best, and often frustratingly unfair. Unqualified leadership: Several team leads or managers lack real technical or project management skills. Some are condescending, some just avoid responsibility. Developers often end up cleaning up the mess, unsupported and unthanked. Lack of psychological safety: Feedback is neither welcomed nor acted upon. HR will listen politely but won't challenge the system. You learn to self-censor. Speaking up can quietly cost you opportunities or your reputation. Emotionally numbing environment: People don’t blow up here — they fade out. Quietly disengaging becomes the survival tactic. Those who care burn out. Those who stay long-term are often those who gave up expecting fairness.

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