No work/life balance - Civil Engineer Tetra Tech Employee Review

2.0
Jul 21, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You can sometimes negotiate work from home, and occasionally there are some interesting projects

Cons

no work life balance - I work a minimum 60 hours a week and manager asks - what are you doing with the rest of your time? At one point I realized - i'm working 60+ hours a week, and this guy over here is working 60+ hours a week (neither of us billing overtime) so while the company could use our extra workload to hire more people, improve the job market, instead current staff is just overloaded and burnt out Profits first, nothing else - client relationships don't matter, staff retention doesn't matter, having the best work product doesn't matter - it's how much money you made on the project, period time off with pay is counted against your overhead - crazy!!! meaning your manager can refuse you vacation if it means your group won't meet utilization goals due to your vacation time (no other engineering consulting company counts vacation/sick leave against utilization, it's separate everywhere else i've worked) the DIVs, business units, etc are so siloed and set up to make groups compete against each other - for corporate space, for project work with clients, for market shares - we should be working together to better our client relationships - not working against each other!

Explore other reviews about Tetra Tech

5.0
May 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good culture, reasonable expectations for position duties

Cons

Difficult to receive any out of cycle raises/promotions

3.0
Apr 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Hired as a "fire-hire," the position is disaster based and 100% travel so you get to travel domestically paid for by the company. When working, pay is good, you can make a lot very quickly with overtime. Being part-time, I can take time-off whenever I want for as long as I want.

Cons

For my position, no natural disasters = no work. Living out of a hotel for months SUCKs and burn-out is real as you could be working 7 days a week, 12 hours a day for months on end. There's no added compensation for taking on an on-site lead position even though the workload triples. As a part-time employee, you have to pay more for benefits when working versus not working. There's a huge disconnect between part-time employees in the field and the full-time employees that do office work and upper management. Part-time workers are not prioritized unless they're willing to do whatever is thrown at them without complaints. The employee turn-over rate in the field is crazy.

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