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Overall employee rating

3.1
Based on 85 reviews
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4
3
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Detail Ratings
Work life balance
3.0
Career Growth
3.0
Work flexibility
3.0
Job Security
4.0
Pay and benefits
3.0
Leadership
3.0
Company Culture
3.0
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Project Engineer
3.3
26 April 2026
Decent Balance for Project Engineers, Project Dependent
Pros: The hybrid work model is a huge plus; I'm in the office a few days and remote the rest, which helps with personal appointments. For many engineering consulting projects, you can usually stick to 40-hour weeks if you manage your time well. It's a big corporate firm with resources.
Cons: Some big infrastructure projects can demand really long hours, especially during crunch times, making it tough to maintain work-life balance. Overtime isn't always paid for salaried Project Engineers, which can be frustrating when deadlines hit hard. It's not always consistent across teams.
Advice to Management: Try to standardize workload expectations across different departments and project types. Encourage managers to really champion work-life balance and respect boundaries for Project Engineers, especially during peak design phases. Consistency is key.
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Civil Engineer
2.9
17 April 2026
Culture is fine, but it's a grind for engineers
Pros: There's a strong sense of team here, especially on big infrastructure projects. You generally work with smart people, and the Dallas, TX office has good amenities. It feels pretty stable being at a large corporate engineering firm.
Cons: The work-life balance isn't great for a Civil Engineer, expect long hours. Sometimes the company culture feels like it prioritizes deadlines over employee well-being. It can be tough to take advantage of any hybrid model because of project demands.
Advice to Management: Try to enforce better work-life balance for all engineering roles. Focus on recognizing individual contributions more.
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Civil Engineer
3.3
17 April 2026
Project work can really test your limits
Pros: It's a stable, large corporate company. You get to work on cool infrastructure projects. The hybrid work model is a nice perk too.
Cons: Work-life balance here is tough, especially as a Civil Engineer. Deadlines mean you're often putting in 50+ hours. That much design work can really burn you out.
Advice to Management: Try to manage project scope better. Don't overload teams with too much design work. Respect personal time, it helps prevent burnout.
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Latest jobs from Jacobs

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Civil Engineer
3.1
10 April 2026
Leadership is okay, but could be better
Pros: Many teams have solid managers who really support you. As a Civil Engineer, I got good project experience on infrastructure. Plus, the hybrid work model is pretty decent in the Dallas office.
Cons: Upper leadership sometimes feels disconnected from daily project work. It's tough to get clear career growth paths for civil engineer roles. Decisions also move really slow in this big corporate environment.
Advice to Management: Try to make senior leadership more visible to project teams. Clarify how junior civil engineers can advance.
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Civil Engineer
3.3
6 April 2026
Culture is decent, could be better.
Pros: There's a lot of smart people here, especially as a Civil Engineer. You get to work on big infrastructure projects which is cool. The hybrid work setup in the Dallas, TX office is a big plus, offering some flexibility.
Cons: Sometimes the company culture feels a bit siloed, making collaboration tough between teams. It's a large corporate firm, so things can move really slow, which isn't always great for motivation.
Advice to Management: Focus on breaking down those internal silos and encourage more cross-team interaction. A more streamlined approach could really boost morale and efficiency.
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Civil Engineer
3.3
6 April 2026
Decent Flexibility, But Depends on Your Team
Pros: As a Civil Engineer, I appreciate the hybrid work model. You can usually work from home 2-3 days a week in the Dallas, TX office, which is a solid perk for managing personal life. The firm generally supports flexible hours if you communicate well with your team, which is nice for a large consulting firm.
Cons: The work-life balance can still be tough if you're on a demanding infrastructure project. Sometimes, despite the hybrid policy, you're expected to be onsite more often for client meetings or specific design work. It's not always consistent across different departments or project teams.
Advice to Management: Standardize work flexibility policies more clearly across all departments and projects. This would make it less dependent on individual managers.
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Civil Engineer
3.1
6 April 2026
Solid experience, but career growth is slow
Pros: I liked working on major infrastructure projects. As a Civil Engineer, you definitely get exposed to large-scale engineering. The pay and benefits were decent for the industry, and the hybrid work model was pretty flexible too.
Cons: Career growth here is really tough. There aren't many opportunities to get promoted quickly, especially for mid-level engineering roles. It feels like you're stuck sometimes, waiting for someone above you to leave. It's frustrating when you're looking to advance your career.
Advice to Management: Management needs to create clearer paths for career progression for engineers. More internal training or mentorship programs could help people move up without having to wait years for an opening.
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Civil Engineer
3.1
5 April 2026
Good Stability, But Culture Needs a Refresh
Pros: The benefits package is pretty solid for a big corporate company like Jacobs. I appreciated the hybrid work option; it really helped with my commute to the Dallas office. There's always a ton of work on various infrastructure projects, so job security felt really good.
Cons: The company culture can feel a bit old-school and slow to change, even for engineering improvements. It's tough to get new ideas implemented quickly. Sometimes leadership feels out of touch with what's happening day-to-day for civil engineering teams.
Advice to Management: Try to really modernize the company culture a bit more. Listen to the folks on the ground doing the actual infrastructure projects. Empower teams to innovate without so much red tape.
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Civil Engineer
3.4
5 April 2026
Work-life Balance is a Mixed Bag Here
Pros: You learn a ton, especially for large infrastructure projects. There's good job security too, which is nice. Our hybrid work arrangement in the Denver, CO office helps a bit.
Cons: It's really tough to keep a 40-hour week. Project deadlines can easily push you to 50+ hours. Remote work often just means more hours, not true flexibility for engineering roles.
Advice to Management: Management needs to set more realistic project timelines. We can't keep pushing engineers to work so many extra hours without burnout. Respect personal time.
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Entry-Level Civil Engineer
3.0
4 April 2026
Good Stability for Entry-Level Civil Engineers
Pros: Job security here is pretty decent for Civil Engineer roles. We always have a consistent pipeline of large infrastructure projects, especially from government contracts. You don't worry about layoffs much in this global engineering firm.
Cons: Career growth can feel really slow sometimes in such a big corporate structure. It's hard to stand out, and innovation isn't always rewarded like in smaller firms. You can feel like a small part of a huge machine.
Advice to Management: Work on faster promotion paths and give junior engineers more autonomy. Help us feel less like just another number in the system.
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