Senior Associate Software Engineer - Senior Associate Software Engineer Capital One Employee Review

3.0
Nov 15, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you get lucky to get put on a high visibility project that has a big impact, you get a lot of recognition. Foosball tables, ping pong, and free snacks in Plano offices. A lot of the developers are really smart, and everyone that I know is happy to help explain things you might not understand. Work life balance depends largely on team. One of my team’s had high performing individuals that would come in at or before 9 and stay later than 5 on most days. My current team does 8am - 4pm. Compensation (for college recruits at least) is very good

Cons

With the new “experience model” team system, Agile has turned into some type of pseudo mix of waterfall and agile. Business tries to dictate deadlines. I know developers who work really hard (harder than me) and stay longer than me, but don’t get the proper recognition because either their managers aren’t good at giving it to them, or because the project they are on doesn’t get much visibility from higher ups. This impacts performance ratings/promotions. Teams that work on legacy tech/modernizing legacy tech don’t get much recognition.

Explore other reviews about Capital One

5.0
May 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Well-run company that knows its values and lives them out. They hire well, and trust people to do their jobs, and people almost always do. Very tech-forward, and adopts the current tech meta quite well.

Cons

Performance management is a double edged sword. It feels intense, but I get why they do it. And helps me reflect on where Im at. Small price to pay

1.0
Jul 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cafeteria, coffee machines, and free food

Cons

no career In my experience, the work was not very meaningful and often felt buried under unnecessary red tape. A lot of things sounded exciting from the outside, but in practice many projects felt surface-level and did not seem to become real production work. Feedback and expectations could also feel vague and shifting, with words like “visibility” and “influence” used without clear guidance. I also felt that career growth and opportunity were not handled evenly, and once concerns were raised, the situation became more stressful rather than more constructive. Hiring and promotion patterns did not always feel transparent, which made the environment feel less fair over time. Overall, I left feeling disappointed by how much the company talks about values compared with how unsupported an employee can feel in practice.

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