Baxter reviews

3.6

68% would recommend to a friend

(4,484 total reviews)
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Andrew Hider

62% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

Baxter has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 4,484 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Baxter employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Farmacéutica y biotecnología industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
1.0
Apr 4, 2025

Don't Join

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cant thinking positive about this God forsaken company except for if you wanna sorta get paid and barely do anything this is the place to be. Well I guess if you're a terrible engineer, you'd fit in here!

Cons

Where aspiring engineering careers go to die. 1. Terrible Pay. 2. Terrible Micromanaging Bosses. 3. Lack of Vision from Leadership. 4. Too Many Engineers that Can't Launch a Product Due to Their Incompetencies 5. Engineers Have Too High of an Ego for What Their Skills Are and What They've Managed to Launch

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Baxter Response
11mo
Thanks for sharing your experience so far. We take your comments seriously and will share your perspectives with leadership. If you’d like, you can provide further details by contacting us at BaxterCares@Baxter.com. We wish you the best within the organization.
2.0
Jan 16, 2025

Random layoffs, non-responsive HR

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good pay and benefits, hybrid

Cons

senior management makes rash decisions without considering the impact for those left behind

1.0
Dec 13, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Co-workers are all really good and wonderful. All very helpful and very welcoming.

Cons

If you value your mental and physical well-being, as well as your individuality, I strongly advise against considering employment with this company. While Baxter undeniably plays a critical role in saving and improving lives through the products it supplies to the healthcare sector, this mission comes at a significant cost to its own employees. The workforce bears the brunt of unsustainable demands, sacrificing their health and morale to maintain the company’s polished image and fuel its operations for the benefit of higher management. Employees are treated as expendable components in a relentless machine, with little regard for their well-being or professional development. You deserve better. Look elsewhere for a workplace that respects and values you as a person, and don’t settle for less than you’re worth. The work environment is excessively demanding, with expectations that far exceed reasonable limits, driven by unrelenting pressure from the healthcare sector. The physical and mental toll required to meet these demands is disproportionate to the compensation offered, which remains comparable to retail wages despite the significant risks involved. Employees are regularly exposed to hazardous chemicals, including substances with DNA-altering properties, making the role untenable given the insufficient pay and benefits provided. The workplace culture is profoundly demoralizing. Management enforces an authoritarian regime where individuality is systematically suppressed, and employees are expected to conform without question. Communication is discouraged, and compliance is expected to the point of absurdity, stripping employees of their sense of self and agency. This approach reduces workers to mere cogs in a rigid, dehumanizing system. Career progression opportunities are limited, both within the organization and in the broader job market. The niche nature of the compounding profession confines employees to a narrow range of roles predominantly in health and science fields, further stifling professional growth and flexibility. High turnover rates reflect the unsustainable nature of this work environment. Many employees leave, unable to reconcile the extreme demands, poor management practices, and lack of meaningful returns. Conversations with colleagues reveal that rapid staff attrition is a recurring theme, driven by the nature of the work and the organizational culture. The hiring process is particularly disingenuous, relying on predatory tactics that promise diversity, flexibility, and a supportive environment—claims that are starkly at odds with reality. Instead, the workplace primarily attracts individuals with limited options, often international workers with minimal alternative opportunities. This practice underscores a troubling reliance on desperation to maintain a workforce willing to endure the subpar conditions.

Viewing 88 - 90 of 4,484 Reviews

Glassdoor has 5,966 Baxter reviews submitted anonymously by Baxter employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Baxter is right for you.