Absolutely terrible place to work! - Crew Member Culver's Employee Review

1.0
Sep 17, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Absolutely nothing good about working here. Enter at your own risk.

Cons

The management could not care less about their employees. The pay is awful and they work you to the bone. They force you to work terrible hours and never give you the days off you request. If you have a family emergency they will not let you take time off and will pester you endlessly about it. The management is extremely unprofessional and rude. They only promote the rudest and unqualified individuals and don't appreciate the good employees. Playing favorites is a huge problem. For an eleven-hour shift you only get two fifteen minute breaks. If you work under eight hours, even just a few minutes under, you only get one ten minute break. They do not offer a free meal ever. If you want to work somewhere management will overwork and underappreciate you and is just generally disgusting, this is the place for you!

Explore other reviews about Culver's

5.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Tim Newkirk was a wonderful and fair boss. Morning staff was responsible, upbeat, and had good team ethics. Vikki my manger always had my back. The BEST regular customers! Flexible schedules

Cons

Night crew, is far less responsible. Occasionally rude coworkers, but that’s life.

2.0
Jun 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible hours. On the job training. Generally supportive co-workers.

Cons

Not safe for those on the autism spectrum, are otherwise neurodivergent. Consistent bullying from a team trainer - refusal to actually train me, constant undermining of my ability, passive aggressive comments, refusal to communicate even the most basic of information to me. This was communicated to management very soon after I started working but nothing changed in the entire year after. I worked with one employee with a seizure disorder, another employee who had carpel tunnel surgery, and three employees with varying degrees of autism, including me. In all of these cases, they were put into situations where their condition is exacerbated. I saw three seizures happen, two of which were after she gave management a doctor's note indicated she requires a break every single day. The lady with carpal tunnel was put into situations where she was forced to scoop desserts, triggering hand pain. I worked alongside in autistic man who told me he had no training on drive-thru, yet was scheduled there anyway. He was kicked off after making too many mistakes, and the managers on duty became visibly exasperated with him. After this, he told me he plans to quit cause he no longer feels welcome. When these problems were communicated to management, I was told that *I* need to learn how to communicate, and that it's a two-way street. Slow, constant pile-up of responsibilities without the training or pay to reflect it. I received a 10 cent raise in my entire time working there, while I was being expected to come in on my day off and supervise multiple stations with my expertise.

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