KPMG is a great place to work, but you will fight for work-life balance - Advisory Director KPMG Employee Review

4.0
Jun 11, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

KPMG invests heavily in professional development, including training for technical and soft skills. Projects provide individuals with experience that is valued in the marketplace. Senior managers and Directors (not partners) have more flexibility in their schedules than the staff. Benefits are good and in-line with the other Big 4 firms.

Cons

Work-life balance seems to be just lip service. Those that achieve work-life balance are rarely rewarded at review time. Those with no life and more than 100 percent utilization typically get much higher review ratings than those with families and kids that achieve respectable utilization. By that same token, Senior Managers or Directors that have work-life balance are perceived as lacking passion or being lazy by the partners. Senior Managers and Directors either move up or out after about 5 years because of this.

Explore other reviews about KPMG

5.0
Mar 9, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Compensation is in line with industry averages for the role and location

Cons

The workplace culture varies by team and department

2.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You get to work with an awesome, highly resilient group of local peers in the advisory practice. The KPMG brand still holds value, but the internal team dynamics have become incredibly fractured.

Cons

We have outsourced 80%+ of our Risk Advisory work, leaving onshore seniors with massive gaps in their experience. As a manager, I am stuck doing senior-level work because I typically have only one or zero local seniors or associates on my teams. The best leaders have already resigned because this model prevents actual management and mentoring. Also, it might take you 30+ years to become partner in Risk Advisory, if at all.

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