Great Place to Start, Not a Great Place to Stay - Anonymous employee Entrata Employee Review

3.0
30 Nov 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people who work at Entrata are amazing. The company wouldn't be where it is without them, and Entrata knows this. They work hard to take care of their people. They plan a lot of fun activities and give away a lot of swag. Honestly, they do try. Entrata is a great place to gain entry-level experience. The building is beautiful, and the gym is AMAZING.

Cons

Benefits: Entrata can't keep talent for this reason. People who are great at there jobs won't stay here long because they can get far more with companies right across the street. Entrata's benefits don't seem comparable. PTO: The PTO policy at Entrata is probably the biggest complaint company wide. According to Utah legislature, employees in the state receive 142 hours (roughly 17 days) of PTO. Entrata is far, far below that. And that's not even considering the new trend of unlimited PTO in the software world. Low compensation: The compensation is a tad lower than other positions, but not awful. Schedule: No schedule flexibility. No options to work remote or split time between home/office. CEO: The CEO is extremely unprofessional as mentioned in many reviews here.

Explore other reviews about Entrata

5.0
23 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great Culture and a product that actually works. They have raving fans as customers, which help a ton

Cons

The shift from bootstrap to VC funded came with the usual issues of turnover and culture shift

2.0
10 Feb 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I have a pretty good group of team members. My mid-level supervisor is also easy to work with and supportive.

Cons

Entrata does not care about their employees, or even their products/services. This is made clear by insane workloads, exhausting meetings with escalated clients, and a “standard” 3% (if you are exceeding expectations and lucky) raise. I do moderately technical work that requires a decent amount of experience, as well as a client facing and internal leadership role, and I don’t make what is considered a “living wage” in Utah, even after years of working here. Execs seem to be having a great time partying at Summit with the most expensive celebrities they can book (Seinfeld, James Cordon, Tom Brady, Weezer…) but absolutely do not care about the uninvited staff who are working to support their client retention and their low-bar concept of product integrity.

3
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