Meeting based culture and long running projects. It has good scope for professional growth across the organization - Software Development Engineer II Expedia Group Employee Review

3.0
Mar 27, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Independence of technologies and reasonably good perks in travel and healthcare. Ability to work from home and 15 days of leave to start with. Mac laptops or windows machines to work with based on choice. Very good technologies to work with which are top of the line. The company is basically a tech industry with a deep rooted passion for travel. It does its best to keep its engineers happy

Cons

Team velocity is slowed due to legacy systems and the leve of hierarchy one has to work with to get things approved and in motion. Some times teams are not flexible with other teams work and will not accept changes in their projects. Things are not documented well and new hires are not informed well to het up to speed. A lot of work done requires getting access to obvious systems one should have access for but may take upto 3 to 5 days for every single thing to be approved. People are not helpful at their first moment and resist changes to their systems.

Explore other reviews about Expedia Group

5.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

work life balance lots of pto

Cons

limited room for growth in the company

2.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay, supportive manager, and genuinely pleasant colleagues.

Cons

Frequent reorgs and shifting strategic direction made it difficult to build momentum or plan long‑term. Over time, contractor roles became increasingly narrow and production‑focused, which limited opportunities for meaningful skill development. Responsibilities that originally included project management were reduced to primarily email production work. There’s also a broader corporate pattern where work is expected to be completed exactly as written, with little room for judgment or improvement. Even small, quick optimizations can lead to pushback rather than appreciation, creating an environment where going “above and beyond” requires multiple layers of approval — which defeats the purpose of being proactive in the first place. Finally, there’s an in‑office expectation (less strict than for full‑time employees, but still present) for work that can be done entirely remotely. This tends to benefit highly social personalities, but for those who prefer focused, independent work, it feels unnecessary. Social dynamics also play a noticeable role; if you’re not immediately well‑liked or you make a single early mistake, it can create a self‑fulfilling perception that’s difficult to overcome.

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