Monster Logo
star star star star_half star_border

4.5

Overall Score

Author: Kaitlyn Short

LAST UPDATED: November 5th, 2025

Monster.com's website is among the top employment sites as far as number of hits and it offers a number of services catered to job recruiters and seekers. Monster.com purchased the Jobs.com domain name in 2002. Visitors looking for a Jobs.com review, can find almost the same quality as Monster.com. Some things that set Monster apart are alliances with newspapers in major cities like New York, Boston, Philadelphia, and Chicago, a focus on Twitter advertising, and sensitivity to accessibility needs on their website.  

Top Ranked Companies

thumb_up

The Good

  • Price range
  • Reach
  • Resources and learning materials
  • Special features
  • Experience
  • Customer support
Price Range
Monster's value plans for job recruiters are as follows: Starter: $99/month
  • 1 reusable job slot
  • 1 Twitter card for social recruiting
  • 50 candidate targeted emails
Standard: $249/month
  • 3 reusable job slots
  • 3 Twitter cards for social recruiting
  • 100 candidate targeted emails
Premium: $399/month
  • 5 reusable job slots
  • 5 Twitter cards for social recruiting
  • 150 candidate targeted emails
The minimum commitment for a monthly plan is 90 days and the commitment is 12 months for an annual plan. A one-time standard job ad costs $375 and decreases in cost per job ad as more are purchased at one time. For example, if you purchase 100-249 standalone job ads, you get them for $130 each. However, by including a location and job title, Monster can present less expensive job bundles (depending on the location) with optional add-ons. A skilled or hourly job ad costs less at $119 for a 14-day job ad, but has fewer options included. Monster is constantly running special offers and promotions, such as buy one ad, get one free. Promo codes get the customer a certain percentage discount off.
Reach
Monster provides services in over 40 countries and its network includes 1,000 newspaper partner sites in addition to its own website, web network, and mobile apps. According to the company's daily stats, 35,800 resumes are added to the database every day, 6.5 million job searches are performed, and 5.1 million jobs are viewed.
Resources and Learning Materials
Monster's home page provides links to six different communities for job seekers: career start, healthcare, part-time, retail, technology, and transportation. Each community features blog articles, job listings, career advice, and tweets relevant to the industry or job seeking phase. This way, job seekers that fit into these niches have a learning center already curated with resources that fit their needs and goals. The education center for recruiters categorizes their resources into the categories of recruiting and hiring advice, workforce management, market intelligence, monster training, HR events, and small business. It features 2 free guides: a business hiring guide with basics on creating an effective job ad, and a guide to hire, engage, and retain millennials. Recruiters will find Monster's "best keywords" series especially helpful-these articles feature the best way to cater to job seekers in several specific metropolitan cities in the U.S.
Special Features
  • Skilled and hourly job ads: Recruiters can choose from over 300 job titles, modify a pre-written job description as necessary, then simply enter a company name, job location, and contact information to be matched with candidates (screening questionnaires and auto-reply emails are not available with this product).
  • Power resume search: Monster's matching technology finds matches based on search criteria, then ranks candidates according to how relevant and recent the specific qualifications are, improving efficiency in the hiring process.
  • Social exposure: Job listings can be turned into a branded tweet promoted to Monster's Twitter followers.
  • Resume writing service: Users can have their resume edited ($139.95+) or written and designed ($179.95+) within 3 days by a professional through CareerPerfect.com. Add-ons include cover letter help, interview follow-up letter, and bio.
  • Targeted hiring solutions: Monster gives specific recommendations and services for hiring job seekers in certain demographics or industries, including healthcare workers, government hires, military veterans, college students, and recent graduates.
  • Company profiles: Businesses can provide updated descriptions, photos, reviews (through kununu.com), news, and job listings on Monster to increase
Experience
Monster.com was founded in 1999 with the merger of The Monster Board (1994) and Online Career Center. The 1994 job database containing job descriptions from the newspaper was the first public job search that could be searched with a web browser. So though The Monster Board was an extremely simple, dinosaur version of today's Monster.com, we count the company as an impressive leader in the job industry.
Customer Support
Paid clients get on-demand support during business hours through live chat (Monday-Friday 7:00 AM - 8:00 PM EST) and phone communication (available Monday-Friday 8:30 AM - 8:00 PM EST at 1-800-MONSTER. In fact, all Monster.com visitors can chat with the sales team through the live chat or submit a help form to the service team.
gavel

The Bottom Line

Monster has a good handle on the online recruitment market. The company's bundle packages, standard purchase options, and frequent promotions show that they approach customers in a variety of ways-similar to their approach in recruitment.
Was this content helpful?
thumb_up Yes thumb_down No

Star Rating

info

3.6

star star star star_half star_border

111 Reviews

Review Breakdown

5 grade

32%

4 grade

23%

3 grade

27%

2 grade

8%

1 grade

10%

Sentiment Criteria

Value

star star star star star_border

Quality

star star star star star_border

Service

star star star star star_border

Trustworthiness

star star star star star_border
cancel
info
check_circle

Review Source

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Megan Roper South Jordan, UT

Monster was very confusing to use. You always have to read the fine print or you will be paying for something you didn't expect. I paid to post a job, but it was such a big hassle in the end so I just cancelled it. I will probably not use Monster again. But, I am grateful for their customer service who helped me get my money back after not being happy with the product.

4 years ago

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Morgan Durango, CO

Monster Resume search is completely worthless, they fail to market themselves in the tech industry and I haven't found one decent candidate on their resumes board in over a year. Would never recommend.

6 years ago

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Kenneth Okerlund Orem, UT

They sent way too many emails on information that I didn't want, I never had any success through using this site and ultimately gave up on it out of frustration of the massive amount of emails that were irrelevant to me.

8 years ago

check_circle

Review Source

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

. Nashville, TN

It used to be the #1 job-seeking website, but too many deceptive job ads are posted there. I lost interest in this site and it has been YEARS since I've visited. The name of it was a terrible idea by whoever created it. Monster?? Really??

4 years ago

check_circle

Review Source

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Tualagi Saint George, UT

Avoid this site! I got call's from random strangers out of state who didn't even speak proper English. I was getting phone call's of jobs i didn't even apply for. It was a joke! Do not sign a contract with them, thats all they care about is the signature and after that it is difficult trying to get a hold of someone.

7 years ago

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

William South Jordan, UT

Monster is the worst place to find a job. I have never had any luck with Monster. I often wonder if the jobs are even real??

7 years ago

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Greg Kolo

Our computer company paid a lot of money, over $4,000 to purchase a job package and Monster was a total waste of our time and money.

8 years ago

check_circle

Review Source

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Kyle Hinton ,

The jobs are very limited in my area and I've never had any luck finding anything. It seems to be geared mainly toward white collar workers.

4 years ago

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Katie Kearney Vienna, VA

If you ever put in your information, be prepared to be spammed with emails! It's crazy how much they will email you and it's so irrelevant too.

7 years ago

check_circle

Review Source

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

L. T. Sacramento, CA

This company's hey-day is long gone. Absolutely not a go-to for finding a regular job. Have fun swimming in a bunch of "work from home" nothings.

7 years ago

check_circle

Review Source

star star_border star_border star_border star_border

Hannah Barth Tallahassee, FL

When I submitted my resume on Monster I received tons of spam emails. I did not want my information to be public.

4 years ago