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Atria Senior Living

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Extremely overworked and underpaid - Resident Services Assistant Atria Senior Living Employee Review

2.0
25 Jan 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working with the residents and getting experience working with the elderly population is great. Co workers are supportive. The resident services director and life guidance director are amazing, they truly cared for us and supported us.

Cons

Upper management is a really big issue. The pay is terrible. They will keep accepting new residents when there are already too many residents for only 2-3 caregivers per shift, which is not enough people at all to care for an entire building of 20-30 people. This problem is more notable in memory care. Upper management ultimately makes these decisions keeping o ur supervisors hands tied.

Explore other reviews about Atria Senior Living

5.0
4 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Not super stressful Good work environment

Cons

Not enough training before starting

1.0
15 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Wonderful relationships with the residents and coworkers.

Cons

My experience with Atria Senior Living was deeply disappointing. While the residents were wonderful and made coming to work worthwhile, corporate leadership consistently overshadowed what should have been a resident-focused environment. There was a significant disconnect between corporate executives and the day-to-day realities of the communities they oversee. Decisions often appeared driven by financial metrics rather than resident satisfaction or employee well-being. Employees were expected to absorb the consequences of those decisions while being given little support and even less respect. The culture from upper management was one of criticism rather than collaboration. Employees were frequently spoken to in a manner that felt demeaning and unprofessional. Constructive coaching was rare; public criticism and intimidation seemed far more common. Morale suffered because many employees felt undervalued, unheard, and disposable. Perhaps most troubling was the growing frustration expressed by residents and their families. Frontline staff worked hard to provide excellent service, but many resident concerns were beyond our control and stemmed from corporate-level decisions. It was heartbreaking to watch residents feel ignored while the people caring for them were left without meaningful solutions. The residents deserved better. The employees deserved better. A company that serves seniors should lead with compassion, dignity, and respect—not only toward residents, but toward the people entrusted with their care. I am grateful for the relationships I built with residents and coworkers, but I would not recommend employment here to anyone seeking a supportive workplace culture or leadership team that genuinely values its employees.

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