Included Health reviews

3.1

44% would recommend to a friend

(687 total reviews)
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Owen Tripp

56% approve of CEO

42% positive business outlook

Included Health has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 687 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Included Health employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

687 reviews
1.0
Jan 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay, sales incentives on renewal and upsells which is uncommon in CS. Talented, hardworking people on the front lines. Many teammates genuinely care about members/clients and try to do the right thing. If you like ambiguity and firefighting, you’ll get a lot of reps quickly, but there is a burnout culture.

Cons

CS took a noticeable turn about three years ago and has been on a steady decline since -- higher turnover, less stability, and more “cliques” driving how information flows and decisions get made. Lack of clear senior leadership strategy and consistent execution. Priorities shift frequently, and teams are left to interpret (or rework) direction without stable decision-making. Customer Success is treated as the catch-all owner for nearly every facet of delivery, renewals, upsells, plan changes, marketing execution, operations, billing/escalations, often without authority, resources, or cross-functional accountability to match. Direction can feel overly influenced by a small informal circle across Sales and CS. If you’re not in that inner loop, it can be difficult to get context, influence decisions, or challenge assumptions—even when you’re closest to the customer reality. There is an underlying fear culture within CS. Speaking up or pushing back on decisions can feel risky, and many people choose silence over candor because they worry about repercussions through performance management. Decisions are regularly made top-down and then reversed weeks later once frontline teams explain why the approach won’t work in practice. This creates churn, rework, and burnout. Leadership culture can feel more focused on optics and managing up than understanding day-to-day CS realities and enabling teams to succeed. Product and market competitiveness feel stagnant. Limited meaningful product innovation, uneven delivery for members/clients, and competitors have closed the gap, making value harder to defend at current price points. Commercial headwinds are visible: new logo growth has been difficult, and more clients are terminating year-over-year. Significant leadership turnover across business units, with insufficient backfills for critical roles that support client delivery. The load rolls downhill to frontline teams. No clear career path in CS. The ladder is essentially CSM → Sr. CSM, and internal mobility from CS into other functions is uncommon. As a result, many strong performers ultimately leave rather than grow within the company. There is a distinctive inner circle across Customer Success, Sales, and Onboarding that disproportionately influences decisions and too often those decisions seem driven by personal incentives rather than what’s best for clients or the broader CS team. The culture can feel performative and self-promotional (“look at me” leadership) instead of grounded in outcomes and collaboration. Adam Grant’s Give and Take distinguishes between “givers” who invest in others and “takers” who seek to extract more than they contribute. In my experience, much of senior go-to-market leadership at IH (AVP/VP/RVP levels) operates more like takers than givers. If you’re comfortable competing internally and stepping on colleagues to get ahead, you may thrive here. If you value humility, shared accountability, and team-first leadership, it can be a frustrating environment. You should know that CS leadership presents as supportive, but in practice it often feels self-serving and image-driven. If you’re not in the inner circle, you’ll have limited influence and you may be blamed for outcomes you don’t control. I wish someone had warned me.

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Included Health Response
5mo
This is the last thing we want to hear, and we are sorry that this has been your experience with us. Please know that your Talent Partner is always available to provide the support needed to improve your time on the team. We’ve escalated your feedback to leadership and thank you for everything you do.
1.0
Jan 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- They give you money in exchange for your work. Depending on your leverage at hire time this might even be a decent salary. - They offer equity (although it's worthless) - Opportunity to put out massive technical fires that could melt the permafrost of a Siberian winter (these do look good on a resume) - Some cutting edge tech stacks, and actually quite a few brilliant technical leaders - A good chance to learn what it's like working in a medium-large engineering org, a want to be micro-tech company.

Cons

Before the merger and tech market downturn in '22 this was actually a decent place to work. But now I can't in good conscience recommend this job to anyone but the most desperate people. If you have the choice just don't work here, consider the misery factor a solid 40% depreciation on your offer salary (again the equity is worthless). I listened to leadership attempt to placate us over and over again about how they were "listening to our concerns" regarding expectations all while they cultivated an environment of fear and insecurity as well as intense competition by constantly and stealthily laying off engineers and re-orging every year after attrition became so bad on teams they could no longer function. If you do work here and get even a whiff of disapproval start looking for another job as you'll be the next fall guy guaranteed. I heard rumors and saw evidence of multiple people who went through mental health crises due to the stress and expectations. The working environment is a political shark tank and i'd even go so far as to call it radioactive. The strong people eventually leave, the ones that stay behind, well I fear for their mental health. I knew I had to go after watching every person I actually trusted at the company leave over multiple years (these also happened to be some of the most competent and essential people). You'll figure out pretty quick that the rubber of the mission barely meets the road due to profitability constraints and under-resourcing. The company does provide a real product and you do "help" real people but I'm not convinced in any magnitude that makes a difference.

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Included Health Response
5mo
Thank you for providing your insights. This is disappointing to hear as it falls far short of the standards we set for ourselves. Your feedback has been escalated to leadership for a thorough review.
5.0
Dec 30, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Included Health is truly an amazing company to be a part of. From day one, it is clear that this is a member-first organization; every decision is driven by how we can best serve our community. It is a wonderful place to work and grow, offering a supportive environment where professional development is actually encouraged. What sets this company apart is how much leadership cares about their employees. The owner is hands-on and incredibly transparent, providing monthly updates that keep the entire team informed and aligned with our goals. Everything is highly organized, and the culture is one of collaboration, everyone is so helpful and willing to pitch in.

Cons

Not a con, but the company is growing rapidly, which is exciting! L

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Included Health Response
5mo
Knowing you've had such a positive experience means a lot to us, and we’re so grateful for your contributions. Thanks for being such an essential part of our team!
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Glassdoor has 740 Included Health reviews submitted anonymously by Included Health employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Included Health is right for you.