Good place to settle down, but not so good if you want to learn and stretch yourself! - Software Engineer Amadeus Employee Review

3.0
Apr 15, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work-life balance. One of the best HR policies and facilities. Plenty of extra curricular activities - Dance, sports, Music club, etc.

Cons

- Lot of approvals to be taken for any new initiative you want to take. - It is very process oriented, and hence you might find it very slow and frustrating at times. - Politics and networking plays very important role in Amadeus. - You might be good at what you do, but that won't matter much if you are not out-spoken and network well. - Most of the company still works on legacy systems, if you lucky to be a part of some good teams you'll end up working in/with some boring tools and technologies. I have

Explore other reviews about Amadeus

5.0
May 22, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits are amazing as well as the team.

Cons

None that I can think of.

2.0
Oct 27, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Learning opportunities, every day brought something new to tackle or explore - Decent benefits package that covered the essentials - Competitive salary relative to industry standards

Cons

- Management is aggressively enforcing a hybrid model, even for remote employees, and is rescinding previously agreed upon contracts. There's a glaring lack of strategic vision from leadership. - If you're based in Europe or North America, job security is virtually nonexistent unless you're in upper management. Roles are being shifted to India, Colombia, and the Philippines, with cost-cutting prioritized over talent, experience, or loyalty. - The forced migration to Azure, compounded by poor planning, is draining resources. And employees are paying the price — not just through increased workload, but by being let go in recent layoffs (October '25). With many of the positions eliminated quietly transferred to offshore. - Layoffs are being justified as “market alignment” and financial necessity. Yet at the same time, the company continues to absorb small to medium-sized companies, raising serious questions about transparency, priorities, and long-term stability.

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