Banner image for Beca

Overall employee rating

3.1
Based on 13 reviews
5
4
3
2
1
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
Disclaimer: Reviews on Jobstore are independently submitted by users; we do not guarantee the accuracy or truth of any individual submission. Read more
Civil Engineer
3.3
17 April 2026
Beca Culture: Mostly Good, Some Room to Grow
Pros: The people are genuinely nice, especially within our project teams. There's a strong sense of camaraderie on big infrastructure projects. It's a solid place for junior Civil Engineers to learn, especially in the Auckland office.
Cons: The overall company culture can feel a bit traditional, almost corporate. Decision-making for engineering design sometimes feels slow. Work-life balance can get tough when project deadlines hit, making the hybrid work model sometimes stressful.
Advice to Management: Encourage more agile decision-making and actively promote work-life balance initiatives beyond just offering hybrid work. Modernize some of the internal processes to feel less bureaucratic.
Show more
Junior Civil Engineer
3.1
11 April 2026
Okay Place to Start, Culture is Evolving
Pros: Beca's a big player in engineering consulting, so there are lots of learning opportunities. For junior civil engineer roles, you get exposure to diverse infrastructure projects in the Auckland office. Most people are genuinely helpful and supportive.
Cons: The company culture can feel a bit traditional, sometimes slow to adapt to new ideas, especially from newer staff. While they offer hybrid work, some teams still expect more onsite presence than ideal, which can impact work-life balance.
Show more
Junior Civil Engineer
3.4
5 April 2026
Okay start, but pay lags for engineering talent
Pros: The company culture at Beca is genuinely solid, people are collaborative. They've got a decent hybrid model, so working remote some days really helped my work-life balance. Plus, the actual work on major infrastructure projects for a junior civil engineer was really engaging, and I learned a ton.
Cons: Pay for entry-level engineering roles just doesn't keep up with the market here in the Auckland office. I felt underpaid compared to peers in similar large engineering firms. The annual bonus wasn't much, and the pay rises were pretty minimal year-to-year.
Advice to Management: Regularly benchmark salaries, especially for early career engineering talent, to stay competitive in the market. Investing more in significant annual raises and bonuses would help retain good staff.
Show more

Latest jobs from Beca

More jobs
Civil Engineer
3.0
29 March 2026
Okay career growth, but it's slow
Pros: You get solid technical experience as a Civil Engineer. There's a chance to work on diverse infrastructure projects. Some senior folks are great mentors if you seek them out.
Cons: Career growth for engineering roles can be pretty slow. Promotions don't happen often, even with good performance. It's tough to move up without a manager really pushing for you.
Advice to Management: Management needs to be more proactive with career progression. Don't wait for people to burn out before offering clear development paths. Define what it actually takes to get promoted in these engineering roles.
Show more
Civil Engineer
2.9
28 March 2026
Leadership is okay, but needs more vision
Pros: It's good for learning, especially on big infrastructure projects. The teams are usually supportive, which makes day-to-day work easier. They're good about hybrid work options for engineering roles.
Cons: Leadership can feel a bit out of touch with ground-level staff. Decisions often come down without much explanation. There's not always clear direction on career paths for technical specialists.
Advice to Management: Try to be more transparent with decisions and involve staff in the bigger picture. A clearer career growth framework for engineering roles would really help.
Show more
Civil Engineer
3.0
2 March 2026
Decent for Project Work, But Watch Out
Pros: You're generally busy because it's a large consulting firm with many infrastructure projects. As a Civil Engineer, I rarely had downtime between projects in the Auckland office. There's usually a solid pipeline of work.
Cons: Job security here is pretty project-dependent sometimes. If your specific engineering roles are winding down, you can feel a bit vulnerable. Senior management could communicate future plans better, which would ease some stress.
Advice to Management: Focus on clearer, more transparent communication regarding future project pipelines and staffing needs. This would really help with job security concerns for your employees.
Show more
Civil Engineer
3.3
25 February 2026
Hybrid work is okay, but needs more real flexibility
Pros: The hybrid work setup at Beca is a good start, I usually got to work from home two days a week. This really helped as a Civil Engineer avoid the morning traffic in the Auckland office. It's good they even offer it for a big consulting firm.
Cons: It's not always as flexible as it seems, especially during crunch times for big engineering projects. You often feel pressured to be onsite even when WFH is technically allowed. Some managers don't quite embrace the true spirit of work flexibility.
Advice to Management: Really look at how project-based roles, especially for Civil Engineers, can genuinely leverage the hybrid model. More trust in employees to manage their time and location would help. Don't just tick a box.
Show more
Civil Engineer
3.0
25 February 2026
Decent place for engineers, but culture needs work
Pros: They do work on some really interesting infrastructure projects across New Zealand. There's a lot of knowledge sharing among senior engineers, which is great for learning. The WFH flexibility has improved a lot since COVID, making it easier for some.
Cons: The culture can feel a bit old-school, especially for junior civil engineers. It's tough to get your voice heard sometimes, and there's not much innovation from the ground up. Team morale isn't always the best, particularly in the Auckland office, when project deadlines get crazy.
Advice to Management: Listen more to junior staff and actively promote a more modern, inclusive culture. Encourage bottom-up innovation.
Show more
Junior Structural Engineer
3.1
23 February 2026
Culture's good with your team, less so firm-wide.
Pros: The teams I worked with in the Auckland office were really supportive. You learn a lot from senior engineers, which is great for a Junior Structural Engineer tackling infrastructure projects. There's a decent focus on collaboration within specific project groups.
Cons: It feels like the overall company culture sometimes gets lost in a large consultancy. Work-life balance can really suffer when project deadlines hit, impacting team morale. Recognition isn't always consistent, especially for extra effort on complex design solutions.
Advice to Management: Try to make the company culture feel more consistent across all teams and offices. More recognition for individual contributions beyond just project completion would help a lot. Maybe look at workload management to prevent burnout in civil engineering roles.
Show more
Structural Engineer
3.3
10 February 2026
Work-Life at Beca: It's Okay, But Demanding
Pros: As a Structural Engineer, I got to work on some really big infrastructure projects, which was cool. The team in the Auckland office was generally supportive, and there's a lot of knowledge sharing. The hybrid work option was a nice perk when it could be utilized.
Cons: But man, those project deadlines can be brutal. You often end up working pretty long hours, sometimes 50+ hour weeks, to get things done, especially with complex engineering designs. It's tough to maintain good work-life balance when you're always chasing the next milestone.
Advice to Management: Management should really look at project resourcing and setting more realistic timelines for engineering consultants. It feels like we're always understaffed or overcommitted, which burns people out and impacts personal time.
Show more

Are you sure?

Once you confirm, please note that this action cannot be undone.