American Express reviews

4.1

81% would recommend to a friend

(18,607 total reviews)
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Stephen J Squeri

89% approve of CEO

79% positive business outlook

American Express has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 18,607 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The American Express employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finance industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

19K reviews
1.0
Apr 1, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I'm grateful my salary from American Express still pays the bills (for now).

Cons

American Express is probably experiencing its toughest challenge in its long history. We gave out too much credit and are still being hit with huge losses because of it. Our leaders overreacted and have now not only stopped issuing credit almost completely, but also started paying existing cardholders in good standing to cancel their accounts. Now we make almost no money. What this has meant for employees is layoffs, pay cuts, longer hours as our numbers dwindle and low morale.

3.0
Feb 5, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Generally, Amex pays higher than market for entry-level professional (Band 30) and above positions. They also have great benefits, from health and welfare to expanded offerings such as tuition reimbursement and the legal plan. In addition, on site programs such as College Coach and on-site snow day child care make it hard to beat.

Cons

The exceptionally high salaries paid to employees have caused me to compare American Express to a ruthless drug dealer. They lure you in with the sweetness of the salary and benefits addicting you to the "high", but once you are "hooked" they begin to turn the screws demanding more and more output. The incremental increases in compensation tends not to keep up with the pressure, resulting in a growing personal dissatisfaction. However, you cannot leave because you are unable to find comparable compensation elsewhere. Senior Management follows the same communication cycle every year: 1st quarter - Last year was a banner year, however, this year will be one of our worst. Everyone needs to buckle down, cut back and prepare for the worst. 2nd quarter/3rd quarter - Results have been better than expected! We're up where we should and we're down where we want to be. Let's stay on course and try to finish the year strong! 4th quarter - Wow! It was one of the best years ever! We're killing the competition and profits were amazing. Then it repeats all over again. As an employee, you cannot tell when there truly is a reason to be concerned about any given year during the first quarter. It always made me feel like the Senior Management did not "trust" employees with the true information about the current environment. It would be much better to say that the company operates extremely conservatively during the 1st & 2nd quarters of the fiscal year. I'm not a child. Please don't act like you need to "shield" me from the operating philosophy and performance of MY company. Amex operates so conservatively as to be inefficient. The company does not want new and innovative ideas that may incur cost, even when that incremental cost could have huge returns. A prime example is the condition of the technology at Amex. It is outdated, difficult to maneuver, and extremely inefficient. The systems used by customer-facing reps are so dilapidated and outdated it is embarrassing. These should be priority 1 for upgrade and redesign, without delay. The restrictions on technology development are so overbearing that it feels useless to suggest any new ideas or changes. And this feeds into the internal culture of "we'll make it ridiculously difficult for you to make any progress so eventually, you'll stop bothering with your nonsense".

2.0
Sep 2, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Training is thorough, depending on who the trainer is -Beautiful Workplace -Decent Recognition for hard work -The performance-based incentive program is decent

Cons

-Many in "leadership" positions are not qualified to be "leaders". They are data crunchers. - Internal communications are horrible - They overhire, and then find reasons to let the excess employees go - HR takes actions that do not align with what their SOPs say -Many in leadership roles are unsupportive and even rude at times -Very difficult to advance in your career unless you are friends with someone in a position to recommend you for a promotion -As an employee, you are VERY micromanaged

Viewing 121 - 123 of 18,607 Reviews

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