Waitrose reviews

3.9

67% would recommend to a friend

(8,748 total reviews)
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Jason Tarry

74% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

Waitrose has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 8,748 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Waitrose employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Einzel- & Großhandel industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

9K reviews
4.0
Jun 27, 2025

Easy Job

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very easy to do once you get the hang of the technology. Never felt rushed, and often finished early.

Cons

Little to no opportunity to progress.

1.0
Jun 23, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

To say that there are pro's to working this job would be to undermine your own self-worth.

Cons

Encouraged to do overtime without any reward or acknowledgment - I distinctively remember being asked to do a stock count of the entire store and then being dismissed the following day on the basis of not making up 3 minutes missed. It is an unusually classist organisation, meaning that you will meet people who have worked for the company and strangely their children will be too, who somehow have managerial positions within the company. Extremely racist, I could not shake this from my experience working there - I have since avoided Waitrose and John Lewis solely because I remember how it felt to be working there - overworked and underpaid. There is a big difference between the treatment of people from a non-black or Indian background and people who are -- so essentially, if you are not black or Indian you will be treated sub-par and like you are unwanted.

2.0
Jun 11, 2025

Disappointing

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The customers can be entertaining and sometimes on occasion lovely. Fairly generous discount – but how else could shop assistants afford to try the food they need to recommend to customers?

Cons

The company culture projected from head office does not reflect the everyday reality of the shop floor. In my experience, “partner” insights were not valued or respected – pointing out systemic challenges was met with reinforcement of the same unrealistic system that caused the issue. The concept of “shared ownership” has those lower down the food chain in a kind of Stockholm syndrome, which sees shop assistants justify poor treatment for the promise of the Christmas bonus. With longstanding difficulties across the partnership, this mystical bonus hasn’t materialised for several years, living only in the fabled memory of the older partners. When you start to look into the company’s internal documentation, you start to see that the actual benefits of the partnership only really start to kick in at a certain level, around store manager. I have a vague memory of seeing this depicted somewhere as a triangle, looking dangerously similar to something you’d see in a pyramid scheme. Since leaving the “partnership”, I’ve continued to have a yucky feeling whenever I find myself in a Waitrose. You’re far better shopping and working at Aldi – they’ll pay you more and charge you less.

Viewing 358 - 360 of 8,748 Reviews

Glassdoor has 9,111 Waitrose reviews submitted anonymously by Waitrose employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Waitrose is right for you.