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Selective Insurance

Engaged Employer

Selective Insurance reviews

2.7

31% would recommend to a friend

(436 total reviews)
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John Marchioni

41% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

Selective Insurance has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 436 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Selective Insurance employee rating is 25% below average for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

436 reviews
2.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Selective offers a strong retirement benefits package. The employer 401(k) contribution is well above industry average and is a genuine differentiator.

Cons

Unmanageable workload is the biggest structural flaw in this organization. Underwriters are expected to manage books with a premium volume that makes thorough, quality underwriting unrealistic. The expectations placed on individual contributors are simply not aligned with the resources or staffing provided to meet them. When performance suffers under these conditions, the response from leadership is disciplinary rather than corrective. PIPs are initiated with little to no prior investment in coaching or mentorship, and there is minimal self-examination at the management level about whether workload structure itself is contributing to the problem. Accountability flows in one direction. Overall, the company has strong benefits on paper, but the day-to-day operational reality makes it difficult to perform at the level the organization claims to expect.

1.0
May 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent benefits and decent coworkers

Cons

Working at Selective was a toxic work environment shaped by favoritism, excessive workload expectations, and poor boundaries around employee availability. Management often applied expectations unevenly, which created a lack of fairness and accountability. High performance did not always seem to be the primary factor in decision-making, which undermined trust in leadership. There was also a strong “big fish, small pond” dynamic, where internal status and informal influence often carried more weight than actual performance or collaboration. This contributed to a highly political environment where trust between colleagues was limited and information did not always feel safe to share openly. Employees were expected to be available far beyond normal working hours, creating an unsustainable “always on” culture with no real work-life balance. The workload was consistently too high for the compensation provided. Internal politics further interfered with day-to-day work and made collaboration more difficult than it needed to be. In practice, this environment often encouraged self-preservation over teamwork, which made it difficult to build trust or rely on others consistently. Overall, the environment was not structured in a way that supported long-term employee wellbeing or retention. This is not a workplace that supports a healthy work-life balance. For me, the experience felt unsustainable, and over time it became clear that the environment was not conducive to long-term growth or wellbeing.

4.0
May 11, 2026

Nice people

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people are really nice

Cons

A lot of change with not enough consideration of the impacts

Viewing 85 - 87 of 436 Reviews

Glassdoor has 492 Selective Insurance reviews submitted anonymously by Selective Insurance employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Selective Insurance is right for you.