High salary, but overwhelming workload and poor management - Software Engineer Microsoft Employee Review

2.0
May 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- salary - possibility to work from home

Cons

- big company that behaves like a startup: you will do everything with crasy deadlines: coding, devops, qa, support (24/7 the whole week with often night/weekend calls) - management fires more and more people replacing it with useless AI, making people work overtime a lot for free - some teams are working on 4 or even more projects - very poor benefit system. Basically only MS Shares. No multi-sport card, no mobile phone (even when you literally obliged to be OnCall very often - prepare to pay for it by yourself) - almost zero work-life balance. A lot of meetings are outside of work hours - e.g. starting at 18:00 or even 19:00 or later. Management pushes to make you participate on this meetings with no overtime compensation - instead of coding you will literally spent more than 60% solving internal bureaucracy: requesting endless access groups, trying to find contact, run pointless procedures, filling documents with no real value. Real coding time is like 5-10% at most in almost all teams - you are responsible and blamed for everything. There is very little help from architects/managers (architects are almost absent and don't really participate in many projects at all) - very limited career options, typical American policy - they force you to perform higher role but won't really promote you

Explore other reviews about Microsoft

5.0
Jun 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Interesting and varied work. Seasonality to the job allows for rest period

Cons

Less stability than there used to be makes people afraid to take risks

4.0
Jan 28, 2013
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. If you love tech, this is a great place. No doubt you'll talk tech (mostly the MSFT stack) from enterprise to consumer - from PCs to phones to Xboxes - from datacenter to desktop. 2. What were GREAT benefits are now VERY GOOD (took a small step down) but still probably better than you'll find at 99% of large corporations. If you've got family - the value of the benefits is even higher. 401k match is nice. 3. Even with it's struggles MSFT is still a cash printing machine. This means if you can keep your nose clean and do reasonable work, you can have a stable job, pay your bills, feed your family, and not worry (too much) about layoffs. The stock you own likely won't tank, but probably won't go up much either. You'll get a bonus each year and some stock. It's a decent life if you aren't looking to light the world on fire.

Cons

Brand on Your Resume: After many years of losing market share and struggling to be at the front end of innovation and the fact that there's 90,000 employees, don't think MSFT is necessarily going to be attractive on your resume to more agile and smaller companies. Managing Your Career: Make you say this out loud so it registers - 90,000 employees work there. Double that for vendors. It is VERY hard to "stand out" and move up in the company. Don't expect your manager to be much of an advocate or enabler to help you meet your career goals - they are basically trying to survive the stack rank every year too. Not familiar with the stack rank? Check out the 2012 Vanity Fair article called "Microsoft's Lost Decade".

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