HNTB reviews

3.5

69% would recommend to a friend

(869 total reviews)
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Rob Slimp

79% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

HNTB has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 869 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The HNTB employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Construction, Repair & Maintenance Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

869 reviews
1.0
Jan 21, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

HNTB has done some impressive work in the past.

Cons

Management is very removed from the day to day operations of its workers. There is a huge disconnect between bosses and subordinates resulting in anxiety and stress. Communication is poor at best.

1.0
Aug 8, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits package Wide-variety of projects Good work/life balance Quality of facilities and equipment (i.e. large cubes, plentiful parking, new computers, etc.)

Cons

Dishonesty in communication from management to staff level employees, yearly performance review is non-existent and involves unethical office politics - which leads to unmerited promotions and very small yearly raises (eventually leading to low moral for worthy employees), low entry-level pay, pressure to stay billable, pressure to "volunteer" your time during department/office-wide meetings, lack of technical screening for new hires (which leads to unqualified co-workers), quick to lay-off when work is slow, Unhealthy competition between different business units and/or offices, Inability to work-share with other business units/offices - leading to either long hours or lack of work

2.0
Nov 28, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay and benefits are solid. I got at least a 3% raise every year, and a 10% raise on a small promotion. Accrued three weeks vacation per year that rolled over. Job security is also pretty good, especially compared to graphic design in other industries. Some projects are interesting to be involved with, and I learned a lot about rail and civil engineering. It gave me a more informed perspective on the large infrastructure projects around me.

Cons

A lot of the work is quite tedious. There’s more cleaning up messy documents and repurposing old files than there is actual original graphic design work. When you do get the chance to design from scratch, you’ll often be hindered by asinine restrictions from clients (i.e. “must be Times New Roman 12pt font”), and/or the uninspired and dated corporate brand guidelines. The general culture of quantity over quality leads to unrealistic deadlines and expectations on everyone in marketing, including the designers. Overworked engineers constantly send in materials late, but only marketing gets blamed when things run behind schedule. As a result, there is frequent pressure to work faster and cut corners, or worse, to work overtime to make up for someone else failing to hit a deadline. Middle managers are good at elevating issues to their superiors, and later passing along excuses as to why nothing can actually change. Meanwhile, from leadership you hear ad nauseam about how it’s so much better to work here than for any competitors. As I haven’t worked at a competitor, I can’t speak to the veracity of this, however it is telling that they rarely compare to anyone outside of the AEC industry. As work cultures change dramatically elsewhere, everything here remains static, no matter how archaic. For me, the absolute worst thing about the culture was the micromanaging of time. Charge a few too many hours to a project on your timecard, and you’ll have someone lecturing you about how you weren’t productive enough during that time. My office was also quite stingy about what “optional” time they would pay for – not only regarding stuff like happy hour socials, but also for things like internal mentorship programs, and even all-hands meetings. I’ll be quite happy if I never see “no charge code will be provided” on an explicitly work-related meeting invite ever again. All in all, this was at best a dull, and at worst a dreadful place to work.

Viewing 91 - 93 of 869 Reviews

Glassdoor has 983 HNTB reviews submitted anonymously by HNTB employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if HNTB is right for you.