Accounting - Anonymous employee Verra Mobility Employee Review

2.0
Oct 14, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great benefits (Some of the best I have come across). Many growth opportunities, fantastic CEO. Beautiful new building we will be moving into in a couple of weeks. Very helpful IT team that will fix your issues very quickly. Great tuition reimbursement opportunities. HR team only practices core values whenever CEO is around (as I am told by many employees)

Cons

Poor communication. Too many managers where they are not needed. Brown nosers get very far, you will not get far if that is not your type of personality. Call center employees treated like they are worthless even though they are potentially the money makers. People with degrees make less money than people that do not and struggle to work their way up.

Explore other reviews about Verra Mobility

5.0
Apr 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has a strong, collaborative culture where people are genuinely invested in doing high-quality work and supporting each other. There's a lot of exposure to interesting, complex projects, and you're trusted to own your work and make an impact. For anyone who wants to grow professionally, there's real opportunity here. High performers are recognized, and you're given the space to step up and expand your scope.

Cons

Work can be complex and fast paced but a great environment for people who enjoy challenging problems and making meaningful changes.

1.0
Mar 21, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They'll mail you a box of popcorn and nuts around Xmas, sometimes.

Cons

Compensation is well below industry average and the benefits are just as bad — healthcare especially is expensive for what little you actually get. There is zero upward mobility. When someone leaves and a role opens up, they will hire externally every single time instead of promoting the people already doing the work. They run intentionally understaffed under the excuse of staying "lean," which just means the people there are overworked with unrealistic deadlines and no relief in sight. Micromanagement is a serious problem throughout the organization. My manager was passive-aggressive and toxic. One-on-ones were essentially monologues — you couldn't get a word in while they rambled about what the team should and shouldn't be doing. When something goes wrong, senior leadership is quick to point fingers downward. There is a clear pattern of blame being shifted onto individual contributors and mid-level managers to protect those at the top.

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