REI reviews

3.6

63% would recommend to a friend

(4,368 total reviews)
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Mary Beth Laughton

35% approve of CEO

34% positive business outlook

REI has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 4,368 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The REI employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
3.0
Feb 2, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

REI has great employees and great customers. They are the heart of REI's authenticity and culture. It's fun to work with and get a discount on all the exciting outdoor gear. REI has better benefits than many other low-wage jobs I've looked at, with a lower threshold for health insurance eligibility than most (you must average 20 hours per week after your first 1000 hours on the job). There is a fair amount of autonomy and capacity to make your own decisions. Managers, (when they are present), usually support you. The pay is better than Taco Bell and you don't come home smelling like ground meat product?

Cons

The pay is still too low, and the hours fluctuate greatly. Often, meeting your membership quota is about the only measure of your performance that managers evaluate you on. If you've ever experienced a cashier or sales specialist become outwardly irate at your refusal to join the co-op, it's because if they don't sell that membership, they won't get enough hours next week. Over the past few years, it seems as though upper management has been trying to squeeze out more profits by tightening down on "controllable expenses", mainly payroll. Which means when the store gets really busy it is likely under-staffed. REI likes to boast about its "Diversity and Inclusion" but racial and ethnic minorities are still grossly under-represented in the pool of employees, and the health plan explicitly discriminates against transgender employees.

4.0
Jan 30, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Insurance available if you can work enough hours, excellent retirement advising and retirement savings, fun work, not too demanding most of the time. And they usually have peanut butter, bread and ramen in the breakroom. mmmmm.

Cons

Not too demanding most of the time, I don't love to eat ramen, don't live at home and my other two jobs don't really cover the gap. Can't get much more than 20 hours a week. If you want to advance, you have to move.

4.0
Jan 30, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

great coworkers and work atmosphere. You get great deals on everything, which you get access to right after training. higher than normal percentage of nice customers.

Cons

hours fluctuate with no consideration of the impacts. Retail hours fluctuate ~36 to 5 (or even 0) and that can span months. Hiring follows demand, rather than anticipating it, leading to improper staffing. Employees must sell memberships, and hours are typically based on membership sales. Sadly, this means that people are rewarded for focusing on people who are singing up for a membership and ignoring the other customers. You get REI's health benefits only if you are full time (32hr+), otherwise you are on government healthcare. Previously they gave benefits to everyone (with different levels based on hours worked). The rest of the benefits you won't get until you work 1500 hours, which takes a long time when you average 15 hours. Although they do try to hire from within, if you are looking for a corporate level job, most of those go to people outside of the company. Overall, i still think that it is a great place that tries hard to do the right thing.

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Glassdoor has 4,507 REI reviews submitted anonymously by REI employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if REI is right for you.