Employee-owned, well-run, and one of the largest geotechnical firms in the US. - Anonymous employee Terracon Employee Review

4.0
Jun 2, 2012
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The corporate office is pushing a safety program that is starting to take hold. It is about the company showing concern for and caring about employees 24/7, not just while we are working. It's a welcome change, and is improving both morale and safety. Compared to the local competitors, the company did pretty well during the recession. We didn't get a raise every year but most people held onto their jobs. The company gives technology tools to technicians and drillers - laptops, smart phones, etc. They give small mid-year bonuses or raises to techs for passing certification tests. Company is willing to invest time and money in training and technology to out run the competition. Almost everyone gets a bonus in the fall. Pay is probably average for geotechnical/environmental engineering companies, benefits are better than average. Pretty good tuition reimbursement program.

Cons

The cons are similar to what you find at other consulting engineering firms: long workweeks because managers run offices understaffed; budget and schedule pressures on most projects; chargeability goals are difficult to hit; after awhile too many of the projects seem the same; and some clients have unreasonable expectations.

Explore other reviews about Terracon

5.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great to work at. Good benefits

Cons

Pay is on the lower side

3.0
Jun 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You have sustainable hours for construction but there is mandatory overtime (The most I’ve done is 51 hours in a week), they pay you enough to live on, it’s good experience, upper management pays lip service to workers rights, there is genuine concern and regulation from management to provide you an emotionally and physically safe place to work, you’re never really rushed to do your job, and you do have the right to stop work

Cons

You need a degree in engineering or geology to move up and you have to threaten to move offices or take another job to get a pay raise. It’s not unionized.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All