r/ChemicalEngineering Apr 26 '23

Salary Entry level salary right after university

Hi yall, I recently landed an entry level material engineering job and received a salary offer of $63k per year. I graduate with my chemical engineering degree this May. I am wondering if this salary offer is fair or if I am underselling myself.

When I attempted a salary negotiation with the recruiter in HR, they mentioned that the salary system is based on an annual evaluation and that the company has seen an average salary increase of 10% to 12% due to inflation.

I have accepted the offer, but I would appreciate any input or insights from those with more experience in the field. Thank you in advance for your help!

39 Upvotes

75 comments sorted by

View all comments

61

u/Ritterbruder2 Apr 26 '23

Sadly entry level salaries have not kept up with inflation. I started at $66k in Jan 2015, and that was a good 25% below average starting for chemical engineers in my area. That same job is still starting their fresh grads out at the same salary in 2022 last I checked.

3

u/[deleted] Apr 26 '23

How has your mid-career salary kept up? Have you found that compensation bumps and such put you in a more competitive position?

I ask because I took the anonymous salary survey here & looked at AIChE data, but I don’t see Glassdoor offering jobs anywhere close to the average salary range posted from those sources.

3

u/Adventurous_Piglet89 Apr 27 '23

Maybe someone knows, but I've often wondered how often glassdoor updates their figures. It looks to me like they don't ever get rid of old data, and their salaries are constantly dated and under current rates.

3

u/waynelo4 Apr 28 '23

I started at $60k and I’m 6 years out now making over double that. I’m on my 3rd job out now though and my biggest jumps easily have come from taking those new positions

2

u/Ritterbruder2 Apr 26 '23

Over doubled

1

u/[deleted] Apr 26 '23

[deleted]

5

u/Ritterbruder2 Apr 26 '23

The 3% annual isn’t a “raise”. It’s just an adjustment. Actual raises should be at least 10%.

By the way, 37% increase in 7 years comes out to 4.6% averaged annually. Double in 8 years comes out to 9% annually. I got all of my big raises except one from changing jobs. I’ve also been laid off twice and taken pay cuts during that time.

1

u/[deleted] Apr 26 '23

Okay I may be doing things wrong…been with current company 5 years. We froze raises for 2 years during Covid, and then coming out of Covid I got a double promotion (so up twice on ladder). We did a market adjustment, so the total of two years raises / double promotion / market adjustment was 16%, which I negotiated to 20%. Basically we restructured and I do what used to be 4 independent roles, hence the raise.

I did look around for jobs, but people kept offering me things like 80k for 5-10 YoE roles so I quit.