bassplayer45
Well-known member
Our company has a set policy. You pass the PE, you get a set raise and the same bonus. I consider myself pretty under paid
I have found this website to be eerily accurate. Off the top of my head, though, assuming some years of experience plus your certs:
0-2 years
www.engineersalary.com
Unlicensed, I gross between 61k - 62k per year, depending on OT. I hope that a license brings in more.
Unlicensed, I gross between 61k - 62k per year, depending on OT. I hope that a license brings in more.
I am water resources as well, and I am currently making 60K excluding OT or around 64K including all the OTs this year. For my company, the PE license bumps you up to the next title and the raise is just for the title upgrade, which is 2 - 3%. But with the title update, you won't get the 1.5x rate for overtime anymore. In fact, you have to work at least 44hours AFTER subtracting out all the meeting/non-project time to qualify for overtime. Anything less is volunteer work. So, if you work a lot of overtime, the title upgrade actually works against you.
Anyone else in the water field? How much do you guys get?
Unlicensed, I gross between 61k - 62k per year, depending on OT. I hope that a license brings in more.
I am water resources as well, and I am currently making 60K excluding OT or around 64K including all the OTs this year. For my company, the PE license bumps you up to the next title and the raise is just for the title upgrade, which is 2 - 3%. But with the title update, you won't get the 1.5x rate for overtime anymore. In fact, you have to work at least 44hours AFTER subtracting out all the meeting/non-project time to qualify for overtime. Anything less is volunteer work. So, if you work a lot of overtime, the title upgrade actually works against you.
Anyone else in the water field? How much do you guys get?
I feel like, if you want to really compare, you should include
1) Where you live
2) What your education is
3) How many years experience
at the very least...
I'm in the DC metro area working in water resources, with a Bachelor's degree (halfway through my master's), 4.5 year's experience. I'm currently in the mid 60s (probably around $64k factoring in occasional OT), but with phenomenal benefits.
I really like where I work and it made things easier for getting through the PE exam by staying with the same company for all of my experience. Should, I pass, I will 1) try to negotiate a salary increase- a quick look at salary data leads me to believe I am paid below market value, and 2) start shopping around.
I think I'm leaving some salary on the table and that's a good reason to look around...but more importantly, I think other companies may be able to offer me better project experience more in line with my long term interests. At this stage in my career, building up my resume is a higher priority.
I'm in water resources (4.5 years out of school) currently at $63k. I'm told I will be getting a raise with the PE just not sure how much yet...
Thanks for everyone's insight.
Should I expect a true negotiation or more of a notification of a new pay?
Sounds about right...I'd be happy to crack 70k...time will tellI've seen newly minted Water Resources PEs making $65K - $75K from private firms down here. Depending on how much "Volunteer" work you are willing to do.I'm in water resources (4.5 years out of school) currently at $63k. I'm told I will be getting a raise with the PE just not sure how much yet...
Enter your email address to join: