Northwell Health reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(4,818 total reviews)
avatar

Dr. John D’Angelo

43% approve of CEO

61% positive business outlook

Northwell Health has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 4,818 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Northwell Health employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
2.0
Apr 11, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are great seem to want to please

Cons

Too many to list, most directors are not what they seem lots of bully's

3.0
Oct 5, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pretty decent salary, excellent benefits (when you can find time to use them!)

Cons

The atmosphere is a little oppressive. So much favoritism and hypocrisy from the top to the bottom. Bad behavior is rewarded it seems because they fire the good ones and keep the rotten apples! Management even seems like they are just there collecting their paychecks...is really sad because I really enjoyed working there. Anything mentioned to management in confidence, doesn't stay there!. Too many Indians not enough good chiefs! I ignored the high-turnover and applied anyway and lived to regret it!

1.0
Apr 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Someone people and some leadership

Cons

I’ve worked at Northwell for a little over 5 years now. I’ll start with the positive: some of the employees, nurses, techs, physicians, and frontline staff here are truly exceptional — compassionate, skilled, and dedicated despite everything the system throws at them. Unfortunately, that’s where the positives end. Leadership at every level feels completely disconnected from the realities of employee happiness and patient care. Executives love to tout “Northwell values,” “patient-first culture,” and “employee engagement” in their glossy town halls and endless emails, but they’re nowhere to be found when units are chronically understaffed, ratios are unsafe, or employees are burning out from forced overtime. Instead, we get another round of meaningless “strategic initiatives” that do nothing but create more paperwork and pad administrative resumes. The corporate politics here are vicious. Promotions, and even basic resources often depend more on who you know and how well you play the game than on actual performance or patient outcomes. Dissenters who raise legitimate concerns about safety, staffing, or wasteful spending are quickly labeled “not a team player” and quietly marginalized or pushed out. Favoritism runs deep. Worst of all are the so-called “anonymous” employee engagement surveys. They push these every year with big promises that your feedback is confidential and will drive real change. People pour their hearts out about unsafe staffing, broken equipment, unrealistic productivity demands, and morale-killing bureaucracy — only for leadership to turn around and use the results against the very teams that spoke up. Units that score low suddenly face increased scrutiny, more mandatory meetings, or subtle retaliation disguised as “performance improvement plans.” I’ve seen managers pull people into offices and reference comments that were supposedly anonymous, making it crystal clear that nothing is truly confidential. It’s a trap: stay silent and nothing improves, speak honestly and you risk being targeted. Meanwhile, the C-suite continues to enjoy massive compensation packages while frontline wages stagnate and don’t keep up with New York’s insane cost of living. Budget “crunches” always seem to hit staffing, supplies, and benefits first — never the bloated layers of administration or the parade of highly paid consultants. The result is a toxic environment where burnout is constant, turnover is high, and the amazing people who still show up every day are left carrying an overloaded, broken system propped up by corporate spin and political games. Northwell loves to brag about being one of the largest and “greatest” health systems, but the combination of disconnected leadership, cutthroat politics, and fake-anonymous surveys makes it feel more like a dysfunctional corporation than a place that truly cares about patients or staff. If you value real transparency, fair leadership, and a workplace where honest feedback doesn’t get weaponized against you, look elsewhere. The patients and your coworkers might make it tolerable for a while… but the leadership and politics will eventually wear you down. Strongly do not recommend.

Viewing 13 - 15 of 4,818 Reviews

Glassdoor has 5,231 Northwell Health reviews submitted anonymously by Northwell Health employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Northwell Health is right for you.