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City Engineer Jobs (NOW HIRING)

The City Engineer will step into a vital leadership role as a member of the department's executive team. The Public Works Department has a strong foundation of collaboration across the organization ...

The City Engineer will step into a vital leadership role as a member of the department's executive team. The Public Works Department has a strong foundation of collaboration across the organization ...

City Engineer

Lancaster, TX · On-site

$110K/yr

The City Engineer is responsible for supporting the planning, design, and implementation of public infrastructure projects while also providing technical guidance and operational support to the ...

City Engineer

Hyrum, UT · On-site

$110K - $140K/yr

Hyrum City is accepting resumes for a City Engineer. The primary role of this position is to review, design, and approve engineered plans and specifications for public improvements, subdivisions, and ...

City Engineer

Casselberry, FL · On-site

$108K - $162K/yr

The City Engineer is responsible for the direct supervision and evaluation of the performance of assigned direct and contracted staff. The City Engineer exercises considerable discretion for ...

The City Engineer is responsible for the direct supervision and evaluation of the performance of assigned direct and contracted staff. The City Engineer exercises considerable discretion for ...

The City Engineer is responsible for supporting the planning, design, and implementation of public infrastructure projects while also providing technical guidance and operational support to the ...

City Engineer

Mcminnville, OR · On-site

$96K - $144K/yr

Engineering Opening Date: 06/01/2026 Closing Date: Continuous Position Summary The City of McMinnville is seeking a collaborative and forward-thinking City Engineer to help lead and continue building ...

Position Summary The City of McMinnville is seeking a collaborative and forward-thinking City Engineer to help lead and continue building a high-performing engineering program within our Public Works ...

Hyrum City is accepting resumes for a City Engineer. The primary role of this position is to review, design, and approve engineered plans and specifications for public improvements, subdivisions, and ...

City Engineer

Hyrum, UT · On-site

$110K - $170K/yr

Hyrum City is accepting resumes for a City Engineer. The primary role of this position is to review, design, and approve engineered plans and specifications for public improvements, subdivisions, and ...

Job Summary City Engineers are responsible for planning, directing, coordinating, and inspecting all engineering activities involved in the City's traffic, roadway, and drainage systems. It is their ...

Engineering Opening Date: 05/22/2026 Closing Date: 7/24/2026 11:59 PM Central Job Summary City Engineers are responsible for planning, directing, coordinating, and inspecting all engineering ...

The City Engineer serves as the principal engineering specialist, responsible for integrating services within and among Utilities, Public Works, and Developmental Services functions. The City ...

Description The City of Mason City is accepting applications for the position of City Engineer, responsible for directing the Engineering Department and administering municipal engineering programs ...

City Engineer

Rocklin, CA · On-site

$130K - $178K/yr

The City of Rocklin is seeking an experienced and collaborative City Engineer to help shape the community's future through innovative infrastructure planning, development review, and capital ...

City Engineer

Conroe, TX · On-site

$120K/yr

JOB SUMMARY The City Engineer is a responsible professional and administrative position with duties including, but not limited to, planning, organizing, directing and participating in the work of ...

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City Engineer information

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$172K

How much do city engineer jobs pay per year?

As of Jun 26, 2026, the average yearly pay for city engineer in the United States is $107,956.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $83,500.00 and $133,500.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What is a City Engineer?

A City Engineer is a professional responsible for planning, designing, and overseeing the construction and maintenance of public infrastructure within a city, such as roads, bridges, water systems, and public buildings. They ensure that city projects comply with safety and environmental regulations, manage budgets, and coordinate with other governmental departments and contractors. City Engineers play a crucial role in urban development and the quality of public services, helping to create safe and efficient communities.

What Does a City Engineer Do?

A city engineer works for a city government. They plan community land use, study environmental impact, design infrastructure, make zoning recommendations, research usage recommendations, and oversee project execution. Additional job duties involve exploring project viability, coordinating contractors, presenting progress reports, and managing the project budget. Though much of this job takes place in an office, a city engineer is required to enter the field on a regular basis. Qualifications for this career include a bachelor’s or master’s degree in civil engineering.

What are some common challenges City Engineers face when managing urban infrastructure projects?

City Engineers often encounter challenges such as balancing budget constraints with the need for high-quality infrastructure, coordinating with multiple government departments, and addressing public concerns during project planning and execution. Additionally, they must navigate regulatory requirements and unforeseen issues like weather delays or utility conflicts. Effective communication and strong project management skills are essential to ensure projects are completed safely, on time, and within budget.

What is the difference between City Engineer vs Civil Engineer?

AspectCity EngineerCivil Engineer
Required CredentialsBachelor's in Civil Engineering, PE license often preferredBachelor's in Civil Engineering, PE license often required
Work EnvironmentMunicipal government, urban planning projectsConstruction sites, consulting firms, infrastructure projects
Employer & Industry UsageCity governments, public sectorPrivate firms, engineering consulting, construction companies
Common Search & ComparisonYesYes

The main difference between a City Engineer and a Civil Engineer lies in their work scope and environment. A City Engineer typically works within municipal government focusing on urban infrastructure and public projects, often requiring a PE license. Civil Engineers have a broader role in designing, constructing, and maintaining infrastructure across various sectors, including private firms and consulting. While both roles require similar credentials, their work settings and responsibilities differ significantly.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as a City Engineer, and why are they important?

To thrive as a City Engineer, you need a strong background in civil engineering, urban infrastructure design, and project management, typically supported by a bachelor's degree in civil engineering and a Professional Engineer (PE) license. Familiarity with CAD software, GIS systems, and construction management platforms is commonly required. Strong leadership, communication, and problem-solving skills help City Engineers coordinate with public agencies, contractors, and community stakeholders. These competencies are crucial for ensuring safe, efficient, and sustainable urban development that meets regulatory standards and public needs.
What cities are hiring for City Engineer jobs? Cities with the most City Engineer job openings:
What are the most commonly searched types of City Engineer jobs? The most popular types of City Engineer jobs are:
What states have the most City Engineer jobs? States with the most job openings for City Engineer jobs include:
What are popular job titles related to City Engineer jobs? For City Engineer jobs, the most frequently searched job titles are:
Infographic showing various City Engineer job openings in the United States as of June 2026, with employment types broken down into 96% Full Time, 2% Part Time, and 2% Contract. Highlights an 89% Physical, 4% Hybrid, and 7% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $107,956 per year, or $51.9 per hour.
City Engineer

City Engineer

Raftelis

Drake, CO • On-site

Full-time

Medical, Dental, Vision, Life, Retirement

Posted 16 days ago


Job description

The City Engineer will step into a vital leadership role as a member of the department's executive team. The Public Works Department has a strong foundation of collaboration across the organization in place, a motivated team, and a clear three-year strategic agenda. It needs a skilled, people-centered engineer to drive that work forward with consistency, innovation, and a genuine commitment to the community. This is a rare opportunity to shape how a fast-growing Colorado city plans, builds, and manages its infrastructure for the next generation of residents and businesses.
Reporting directly to the Public Works Director, the City Engineer provides forward-focused operational and engineering leadership for a diverse portfolio that includes Traffic Operations, Transportation Engineering, Capital Projects, Street and Right-of-Way Management, and Development and Planning. The position holds responsibility for the full lifecycle of infrastructure delivery - from master planning and capital improvement programming through procurement, construction, and ongoing asset management. The City Engineer administers multiple operating and capital budgets drawing on a range of funding sources including state and federal grants, the Street Capital Expansion Fee Program, the General Fund, Utility Funds, and Street Maintenance Fees. The City Engineer actively pursues external funding opportunities to extend the City's infrastructure investment capacity. A strong emphasis on on-time, on-budget project delivery and measurable performance outcomes runs through everything this role does.
This role sits at the intersection of technical engineering excellence and organizational leadership. The City Engineer guides citywide master plan development and periodic updates, including transportation planning and stormwater standards, and provides technical leadership for development regulations and design standards to ensure alignment with both industry best practices and community goals. The position oversees the transportation development review process and provides leadership on the City's involvement in land use decisions with engineering implications. Key near-term priorities include standardizing project delivery processes, advancing Public Works toward APWA Accreditation by 2028, supporting updating the Stormwater Master Plan, and strengthening the ROW and stormwater permitting framework.
The City Engineer works collaboratively across the City organization as a Public Works leader, supporting a One-City strategic direction while providing leadership for department-wide priorities. The position coordinates closely with neighboring municipalities, Larimer County, CDOT and regional agencies to advance transportation safety, infrastructure, and funding initiatives. Externally, the City Engineer represents the City at the local, regional, state, and national levels and serves as a key point of contact for the development community, residents, and stakeholders on capital projects, programs, and policy.
Priorities
  • Provide strategic leadership and oversight for complex public infrastructure, development review, and capital improvement initiatives, including project initiation, procurement, contracting, consultant and contractor management, and project delivery. Ensure compliance with City, state, and federal requirements while advancing projects and programs that align with community objectives, industry best practices, and long-term operational needs.
  • Administer multiple operating and capital budgets utilizing a variety of funding sources, including grants, Capital Expansion Fees (CEF), General Fund, Utility Funds, and Street Maintenance Fees. Ensure responsible financial stewardship, regulatory compliance, and transparent reporting while balancing competing priorities and organizational objectives.
  • Deliver innovative, customer-focused solutions through sound professional judgment, collaboration, and effective communication. Represent the City at the local, regional, state, and national levels, and communicate clearly through presentations, written materials, and stakeholder engagement related to projects, policies, programs, and funding strategies.
  • Provide people-centered One-City leadership and operational direction through all aspects of the employee lifecycle, including recruiting, hiring, training, development, performance management, accountability, workplace issue resolution, and employee engagement. Foster collaboration across the organization and external partners while supporting continuous improvement, service excellence, and solution-oriented decision-making.

The Successful Candidate
The next City Engineer is a technically grounded, people-first leader who brings equal measures of engineering credibility and organizational savvy to a fast-growing community with big infrastructure ambitions. This is a leader who understands that great engineering outcomes depend just as much on strong, one-team relationships and clear communication as they do on technical expertise. The ideal candidate is comfortable operating at the intersection of strategy and operations, can hold the long view on infrastructure planning while remaining engaged in the day-to-day realities of project delivery, and approaches every interaction-whether with a direct report, a developer, or a City Council member-with transparency, respect, and a genuine commitment to Loveland's community.
The successful candidate is a skilled manager who invests in their people. They lead through trust and accountability, delegate with confidence, and prioritize professional development as a core part of their leadership practice. This person creates an environment where staff feel supported and empowered to do their best work, where feedback flows in both directions, and where the "one city, one team" approach is the norm rather than the aspiration. The ideal candidate brings proven experience leading multi-disciplinary teams across diverse functions and understands the importance of setting clear expectations, recognizing contribution, and addressing workplace challenges constructively and promptly.
Relationship-building is a strength of this candidate. They are a collaborative partner across the City organization, and they bring a track record of building productive working relationships with regional agencies, the development community, neighboring jurisdictions, and state and federal partners. This leader communicates with clarity and intention, whether presenting a capital program to City Council, navigating a complex development review, or explaining a project delay to a community member. They listen as well as they speak, and they know how to build consensus around difficult decisions.
The ideal City Engineer brings deep knowledge of civil engineering principles as applied to transportation planning and design, traffic operations, stormwater management, floodplain considerations, and urban infrastructure systems. They have a strong command of capital improvement program management, procurement best practices, and the mechanics of administering diverse funding sources including grants, special fees, and general fund allocations. The successful candidate is experienced in overseeing development review and providing technical leadership on design standards and development regulations, and they understand how to align those frameworks with both industry best practices and community goals.
Qualifications
Minimum requirements include a bachelor's degree in civil engineering or a closely related field and eight years of experience with a strong background in urban infrastructure systems and urban design, including transportation planning street design, street and intersection design and construction, traffic engineering, drainage systems, floodplain considerations, and integrated stormwater management solutions. Other requirements include at least eight years of experience managing and overseeing staff and developing, monitoring, and regulating multiple budgets and projects as well as exercising discretionary judgment between intent and rules to make decisions. A Professional Engineer license registered in Colorado is required, or candidates must be able to obtain within six (6) months of hire date.
Preferred qualifications include a master's degree in civil engineering, public administration, or a closely related field. Experience in a public sector environment with direct responsibility for capital improvement program delivery, development review oversight, and administration of diverse funding sources including state and federal grants is strongly preferred. Familiarity with APWA accreditation processes, stormwater master planning, or ROW and permitting program development is a plus.
Candidates must be willing to reside within a reasonable commuting distance of Loveland, Colorado after hiring in order to respond in a timely way to emergencies. Relocation assistance may be available for the selected candidate.
Inside The Organization
Incorporated in 1881, the City of Loveland is a full-service city serving a population of 82,460 across 36.6 square miles with an annual budget of $532 million and a team of 926 FTEs. The City operates under a Council-Manager form of government with a nine-member City Council led by the Mayor, who is elected for a two-year term by the community at large. Two council members are elected from each of the City's four wards to serve four-year terms. The City Manager is the chief executive officer of the City, appointed by City Council.
The City's management team works together to create an environment that encourages innovation, creativity, and growth. Departments include Economic Development, Finance, Human Resources, Utilities, Public Works, Police, Airport, Information Technology, City Clerk, Development Services, Community Partnership, Community Services, and Communication and Engagement.
The City of Loveland's Public Works Department provides planning, design, construction, and maintenance services for the public and the City's internal operations across 10 divisions: Business Services, Facilities Management, Fleet Maintenance, Solid Waste Management, Stormwater Engineering and Maintenance, Streets and Right-of-Way, Transit (COLT), Transportation Development, Transportation Engineering, and Traffic Operations. The department employs nearly 200 full-time, part-time, and seasonal employees and carries a 2026 adopted budget of approximately $78 million, including $25.5 million in capital outlay.
The City Engineer's portfolio sits at the core of the department's infrastructure mission, with direct responsibility for approximately $30 million in adopted spending across Engineering, Street Repair and Maintenance, Traffic Engineering, and Transportation Development and a staff of 56 FTEs. The position reports to the Public Works Director and has 4 direct reports, including the Assistant City Engineer, Traffic Engineer, Streets & ROW Division Manager, and Development Review Engineering Manager. Loveland maintains nearly 400 centerline miles of roadway valued at more than $1.3 billion. Prudent asset management, data-informed prioritization, and disciplined lifecycle planning are central to how the department approaches that stewardship. Funding pressures, particularly for roads and transportation infrastructure, make strategic reinvestment decisions and the active pursuit of external funding sources all the more critical to sustaining long-term service quality.
The department is guided by a clear mission: building Loveland's future through exceptional service, safety, and performance. The City Engineer joins a leadership team and a workforce that takes that mission seriously and a community that is watching its infrastructure investment closely.
The Community
Located 45 minutes north of Denver, Loveland is a vibrant community of 82,460 tucked against the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in the growing Northern Colorado region of Larimer County. The City's friendly, small-town feel and proximity to outdoor recreation and big-city amenities make Loveland one of the most sought-after communities for families, retirees, and businesses alike.
Loveland lies 25 minutes south of Fort Collins, its larger neighbor and the county seat. The two cities have been steadily growing toward each other and are considered a single metropolitan area by the U.S. government.
Boasting 300 days of sunshine, Loveland is surrounded by stunning natural beauty and an expanse of mountains, lakes, and wilderness areas, offering convenient nearby opportunities for hiking, biking, fishing, boating, camping, and skiing. The City lies within a short drive of both Big Thompson Canyon and Rocky Mountain National Park. Within Loveland, 31 miles of paved trails connect to regional trail systems, and the scenic Big Thompson River runs through the heart of the community.
Loveland supports a vibrant cultural scene with galleries, art shows, headliner concerts and theatre productions, professional hockey, and nearly 500 sculptures and public art installations. Since 1985, the City has dedicated 1% of its revenue to public art, earning Loveland a ranking as the number two arts town in America. Loveland is also internationally known as The Sweetheart City - since 1947, over 12 million Valentine's Day cards have been re-mailed from Loveland with a holiday-themed stamp and verse.
Loveland's walkable downtown district features eclectic shops, eateries, coffeehouses, and breweries alongside a robust calendar of events including the Downtown Pumpkin Festival, Festival of Lights, Downtown Beer Week, and Night on the Town on the second Friday of each month.
Compensation and Benefits
The expected hiring range is $152,000 - $204,000, depending on qualifications, with an excellent benefits package. Learn more about our options and employee-based benefits here.
Benefits offered include the following:
  • Medical, dental, and vision insurance
  • City-sponsored Employee Wellness Center with no-cost primary and preventive care services
  • Employee Assistance Program with free counseling sessions
  • 401(a) Money Purchase Retirement Plan with City contributions
  • 457 Deferred Compensation Plan (pre-tax and Roth options)
  • Life and disability insurance
  • Flexible Spending Accounts