Walmart

Multinational retail corporation
Last updated:
January 2, 2026
Company details
HQ
Bentonville, AR
HEADCOUNT
10000+
ORG TYPE
Corporate
SECTOR
Retail & Consumer
About the company
Walmart is a global retailer that sells groceries, household essentials, and general merchandise through supercenters, neighborhood formats, and online channels. The company also runs Sam’s Club, a membership warehouse business, and operates eCommerce marketplaces and delivery services in multiple countries. Walmart supports large-scale logistics and fulfillment networks that move products from suppliers to stores and customers’ homes. Walmart Global Tech builds and runs the technology platforms behind shopping, supply chain, data, and internal tools used across the business.
Locations and presence
Walmart is headquartered in Bentonville, Arkansas, with major early-career office hubs highlighted for students including Bentonville and Hoboken, plus Silicon Valley locations such as Sunnyvale and San Bruno. Many student and intern roles are set up as in-person office internships, and some corporate and tech teams are organised around hub-based working rather than fully remote setups.
Palpable Score
81.3
/ 100
Walmart is one of the most accessible entry points in the market because the company hires at scale across stores, supply chain, corporate, and tech, with multiple student pipelines feeding into full-time roles. The biggest scoring drag is transparency: there is some helpful candidate guidance and well-described intern programming, but less consistent end-to-end clarity on stages and timelines across all early-career hiring.
Pillar 1: Early-career access

Score

19.0
/ 20
  • The company runs a 10-week undergraduate internship program and explicitly positions the internship as a pathway to return offers or full-time roles at the end of the summer.
  • Walmart offers named early-career programs such as the Accounting & Finance Development Program, a rotational 24-month track that candidates can enter via an internship-to-full-time route or by direct post-graduation hire.
  • The company’s early-career access is reinforced by the sheer volume of entry-level roles across stores, clubs, and supply chain, alongside specialist internships like Cybersecurity and Economics that accept candidates with 0–2 years of relevant experience.
  • Pillar 2: Hiring fairness and transparency

    Score

    13.2
    / 20
  • The company publishes practical candidate guidance on applying, including that applications cannot be edited after submission and that candidates can track statuses like “under review” and “interview scheduled” in the careers portal.
  • Walmart gives candidates low-stakes ways to understand roles through “Discover Walmart” job simulations, which can reduce guesswork before applying and help applicants prepare more fairly.
  • The company’s dedicated “hiring process” resource is currently returning a 404, which leaves candidates without a single official, consistently maintained page covering stages, timelines, and what feedback to expect across roles.
  • Pillar 3: Learning and support

    Score

    17.1
    / 20
  • The company structures internships around learning as well as delivery, including executive-led speaker sessions, networking, community outreach, business “deep dives,” and targeted learning and development for both hard and soft skills.
  • Walmart builds early-career development into rotational programs such as the Accounting & Finance Development Program, with planned rotations, hands-on project work, and explicit evaluation criteria across multiple skill areas.
  • The company funds longer-term learning through Live Better U, covering tuition and required fees for eligible associates and adding support like education coaching to help associates pick pathways and complete credentials.
  • Pillar 4: Pay fairness and stability

    Score

    16.5
    / 20
  • The company posts clear hourly pay ranges on many early-career internships, including role-by-location ranges for corporate internships (for example, different ranges in Bentonville and Hoboken) and a stated range for Cybersecurity internships.
  • Walmart backs pay with practical stability support for students by advertising housing and relocation assistance for internships, reducing the financial barrier of moving to a hub for the summer.
  • The company also publishes wage ranges for many frontline roles (including Sam’s Club and supply chain positions) and lists core benefits like health coverage, 401(k), stock purchase plans, and paid time off, which matters for early-career security beyond base pay.
  • Pillar 5: Early-career outcomes

    Score

    15.5
    / 20
  • The company links early-career entry to concrete outcomes by stating that the majority of interns receive either a full-time offer or a return internship offer after the program.
  • Walmart reports upward mobility at scale by stating that 75% of the U.S. store management team started as hourly associates, which signals a real internal ladder from entry-level to leadership in operations.
  • The company shares retention and progression signals through Live Better U, including participation at large scale and externally reported findings that education-program participants leave at materially lower rates, but Walmart publishes limited role-by-role early-career promotion data for corporate and tech pathways.
  • Clear filters
    Results
    matched jobs
    Thank you! Your submission has been received!
    Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.