Mechanic and impact gloves

Mechanic working in a garage with hand protection

Type guideUpdated July 2026

Mechanic gloves sit between light assembly knits and heavy leather. On HPC Gloves work glove guides, the useful split is grip, abrasion, and optional impact padding for knuckles and fingers.

What these gloves are for

  • Automotive and equipment repair with oily fasteners
  • Field service where tools and housings bang knuckles
  • Material handling that needs more palm life than a cheap cotton glove
  • Jobs that still need fingertip feel for small hardware

Features that change the buy

FeatureWhy it matters
Synthetic leather or reinforced palmSurvives wrench work and abrasion longer than thin knits
Oil-resistant coating or grip zonesKeeps hold on fasteners and tool handles
TPR knuckle and finger guardsHelps with impact and pinches; adds bulk
Touchscreen fingertipsUseful if you log work on a phone or tablet mid-job
Breathable back of handMatters for all-day wear in warm bays
Impact padding is not a cut rating. If blades or sheet edges are the main risk, start with the cut-resistant guide and only add impact features if the model still meets the cut level you need.

When to skip the padded mechanic glove

  • Fine electronics or tiny fasteners where bulk kills feel
  • Chemical immersion or solvent washing (use a chemical glove)
  • Welding or hot work (use welding gloves)

Buying checklist

  1. List the top three hand risks on the job: oil grip, abrasion, impact, or light cut.
  2. Pick palm material for the greasiest surface you handle daily.
  3. Only pay for TPR if knuckles truly take hits; padding is wasted bulk otherwise.
  4. Size with the size chart. Mechanic gloves that bag at the fingertips snag on hardware.
  5. Test one pair on a full service call before outfitting a crew.
Independent product education only. Match PPE to your shop hazard assessment and manufacturer instructions.