Revolut reviews

4.0

77% would recommend to a friend

(5,526 total reviews)
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Nikolay Storonsky

91% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

Revolut has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 5,526 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Revolut employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financial Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
3.0
Oct 24, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Modern Office, Daily quality meals

Cons

Incompetent Team- Leaders, Managers are Uninterested and uncommitted.

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Revolut Response
6y
Thank you for your honest review. We’re happy that you like your workspace - we want to create a work environment which brings out the best in all our employees. We’re committed to hiring and internally promoting the best leaders that inspire and motivate all our teams. If you have specific concerns, we encourage you to get in touch with your local HR and provide more detailed feedback. We provide anonymous feedback mechanisms if you are more comfortable remaining anonymous. We value all the feedback we receive because without it we can’t improve. Stronger together!
3.0
Sep 24, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Super cool company to work for, its a new fintech and tons of thing happening

Cons

Salary is not so great

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Revolut Response
6y
Thank you for your feedback. A ton of things will continue to happen, we’re happy to have you on board for the ride. Like all start ups, we are continuing to review our Compensation and Rewards Strategy so that we attract the best talent in the market. We strongly encourage you to bring up any salary concerns you have with your manager and/ or HR. Ask about a path that could put you into a higher pay scale; be vision-based, but data-informed.
5.0
Mar 3, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is a powerhouse job wherein one may instantly see the results of their effort. The rapid growth - albeit the same factor that has led to the somewhat tense internal atmosphere - is an abundant source of genuine optimism that propels the crew each next day and makes it feel fresh. They don't care about formalism, they hardly care how you look/how you dress, they let you to your own views, all these are very big pros to my mind. If an employee proves diligent and reliable, the scope of trust and responsibility given is satisfying, rewarding, and motivating. To be fair - although I see a few tiny but bugging elements that beg for instant improvements, I can simultaneously and easily see myself as part of this company for years and years to come, if only they recipricate this. I'd rather team up to engage in the development, tackling the shortcomings until I happily see them solved than turn on them as a bilious saboteur, which seems too cheap a choice in the unique times that call for resilient characters. The shortcomings, if there're any, often don't result from any malevolence; conversely, they stem from the nearly exponential growth - they're but a natural byproduct of our fast-paced evolution.

Cons

The London part of the crew (to be precise: only some of its reps) struggle to eradicate their overtly condescending thinking towards the other offices' people, without whom - which they seem to be constantly forgetting to realise - they would fall spectacularly come the first tough day. The remuneration system is haphazard. As the time wears on, some of people whose work's quality was questionable are given pleasant, well-paid tenures for no apparent reason other than that they've just stayed for long enough. On the other hand, it is nothing frown upon at Revolut to be promoted to a new role (having won a tough recruitment) only to see that one's been given an effectively smaller net salary, since the entry roles entail extra pay chances which are closed afterwards as one advances. Needless to say how it may play with one's motivation. The feedback path is deficient when it comes to people perched a step higher up the ladder. It is factually impossible to have an influence against somebody over you in the hierarchy, should you see that person not living up to their duties. There's a feeling of disregard to the level of stress a typical consumer-facing employee is exposed to each day. What is more, instead of soothing the impact, there comes a second, tough stress blow from the line managers focused on the KPIs. One may imagine that although stress is natural and can be beneficial, it can't be cranked up endlessly as straining it doesn't go on par with better results or higher discipline. Lastly, an unpleasant surprise that one would rather avoid witnessing is the one whereby the in-house recruitment process sees some staffers outpowering the tough competition and being promoted to the new roles, for them only to be told on the eve of being introduced to the new position that their new contracts had been scrapped due to changing objectives. Regardless of the legitimacy of such turbulent decisions (which may be well justified and which I don't dispute) being tossed to and fro in such an aloof fashion is incredibly burdensome to the psyche. Such shockers undermine everybody's confidence and render many a crewmember dubious about the stability of their own jobs.

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Glassdoor has 6,173 Revolut reviews submitted anonymously by Revolut employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Revolut is right for you.