Mechanic - Mechanic Halliburton Employee Review

2.0
Jan 21, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you want to work a lot, this is the place. Pay is at the bottom end of the industry average for mechanics Work isn't very difficult

Cons

Upper management is near incompetent No organization with scheduling, maintinence process, or maintaining parts No tool allowance or profit sharing Very high turnover rate Overworked, at least 60 hours a week, (right now it's slow) they dont care about your family or personal life. Better find someone else to run your errands and pay your bills, you may be told you work in the shop, but that won't stop them from sending you 8 hours away for weeks at a time to work on a wellsite. I have been sent 4 hours away from home to work for a week, didn't have a hotel or man camp scheduled for me, had to sleep in my truck.

Explore other reviews about Halliburton

5.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture is great. Lots of opportunity to grow.

Cons

Company doesn't have work from home option.

1.0
Jun 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Halliburton looks strong on the outside, especially on a resume, and the brand name still carries weight in the industry. Some teams work on interesting projects, and if you get a fair manager, you can learn a lot about large-scale B2B operations.

Cons

If you land under the wrong manager, performance improvement plans (PIPs) can be used as a weapon, not a coaching tool. I was put on a PIP that contained inaccurate claims even after I shared detailed evidence and context. I provided several solid pieces of documentation to HR to rebut the accusations, yet nothing meaningful was investigated or corrected in my case. HR felt more like a shield for management than a neutral party. In my experience, they protected internal politics instead of looking at facts and evidence. There is a culture of quiet compliance. Many people stay 10+ years because the pay and brand are “safe,” but they are hesitant to challenge unfair treatment or speak up about toxic behavior. Corporate hierarchy is heavy, and real decisions seem to depend more on who is backing your manager than on actual performance or documented facts.

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