I hate Casey's after working there - Cashier Casey's Employee Review

1.0
Jan 30, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They offer a decent salary for people under 18

Cons

I worked at Casey's for six months when I was all of a sudden fired in the middle of a shift because they claimed that I forgot to turn off a switch. It was a very convinient time to fire me for them since I was turning 18 and they would have to pay me more. When I was trying to get the answer as to why I was being fired they said that if I didn't leave right away they would call the police on me and take me to court because apparently I had stolen from them. After firing me they also fired everyone else in the senior grade at the local highschool, obviously because they were either turning 18 or leaving for college soon. At Casey's they seemed to pick favorites. This is not my first job, and I am very tightly and always do my job. But for some reason I was treated like the worst worker ever. There was other people working there who would show up two hours late for their shifts and the management was just fine with that. If someone fills up with gas without paying for it you'll have to pay for it with your own money. Otherwise you'll most likely get fired, for drive offs, which is not your fault at all.

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5.0
Jul 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to work at

Cons

People were great no cons

2.0
Jul 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* The employee discount is very generous, you can have a hot meal, a baked treat and a 16oz soda for about five dollars depending on what you get. * Directpay is mostly convenient, mostly. * Management is pretty good at honoring your schedule or scheduling preferences, you might have a day outside of your preference hours but generally you get what you ask for. * Career growth seems present, most shift leads were promoted at around 5/6 months and managers at 8/12 months.

Cons

* Underpaid, our starting position was 13 dollars and a management position was 16 dollars, keep in mind the McDonald's down the street started you out between 16/17$. * The actual hours you're given fluctuate since corporate determines how many hours a store can give by hot food sales. You're also not allowed to work overtime (though often you end up having to since most shifts aren't given enough people to perform necessary tasks on time) * While their virtual application gives you the option for full-time, only managers or specific staff members can be marked full-time, everyone else starts as part-time. * Regularly understaffed, mid-shift gets most of the bulk while mornings and closing shifts run off of a skeleton crew, especially kitchen staff who have to manage online orders, warmers, ingredient restocking, shift prep and cleaning all by themselves. * Corporate managers tend to have a reputation for over-working their staff and generally being miserable to be around, I've talked with multiple past-employees and store managers who all cited their reason for leaving was because of the given district manager or corporate decisions. * Maintenance crews have consistently done poor jobs at repairing equipment, or have an unusual delay in actually arriving/acquiring the part needed to repair something. Our men's bathroom has been closed four times due to the same issue, and everytime it's re-opened it breaks in the exact same way. * Initial Training is done all at once through around 30 videos, most of which are either common sense (don't be racist to customers) or cover very fringe scenarios like active-shooter responses. I've been working here for three months and I still don't know if I'm allowed to give cash refunds or how to submit a work order for a broken item. * While you are given breaks in your schedule, since most shifts are understaffed you either don't get a chance to take a break or you're limited to a five-ten minute break before the next customer walks in.

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