Caltrans reviews

4.1

79% would recommend to a friend

(851 total reviews)

Malcolm Dougherty

67% approve of CEO

76% positive business outlook

Caltrans has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 851 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Caltrans employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Government & Public Administration industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

851 reviews
4.0
Jan 9, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits, salary, variety of opportunities. Caltrans offers employees a vary generous plate of benefits, including a great retirement package, to both the employee and the employee's family through the CALPERS retirement program (2% at 55 formula for Caltrans employees), one of the best in the country for public agencies. This alone makes working for Caltrans an advantage. When the total benefit package is added up in dollars, the private sector cannot compare. Caltrans salaries for engineering and surveying professionals are now pretty comparable to most public agencies and even private engineering firms; however, many private firms offer salary packages that are higher and/or include annual bonuses which Caltrans does not offer. The typical benefit package of a private engineering firm, however, does not have anywhere near the total value of the package offered by Caltrans. Caltrans also offers engineers and surveyors a variety of different career area where they can work. Caltrans has a rotation program for junior engineers so that they can get early experience in a variety of different areas over a two year period, such as design, construction, hydraulics, traffic, materials lab, etc.

Cons

Difficult to advance up career latter, size of organization causes difficulties, difficult to learn new skills and keep up with current trends in the industry. Promoting in Caltrans, depending upon the function and location, can be rather competititve. Often written tests and promotion ranking lists are required. Sometimes inner politics gets in the way of the selection of candidates (i.e., the best candidate does not always receive the promotion). Because Caltrans has over 13,000 employees, many times it is very difficult for needed changes to be made in the organization. The large size of the organization also makes it easy for "dead weight", or employees who do minimum work contribution, to hide and essentially "get away doing little or no work." It is hard to fire employees after the probation period because of the Civil Service rules. Obtaining salary raises can be difficult for some classifications that do not have as strong of a union. Also, it is rather easy for an employee to get caught in a niche or sole skill/function unless they make an active effort to transfer to other job functions (be a specialist in one particular field or function with no real overall general experience). This can make it difficult to qualify for jobs outside of the organziation, where more general knowledge and skills sets are often desired of candidates.

1.0
Jan 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Your position will be stable once you pass your probation.

Cons

- Untrained management - Hierarchy culture - Promotions are mostly dependent on your duration at Caltrans, connection versus qualifications - Depends on your department, but this one management pushes responsibilities onto you and relies on your “position of statement” to make you do it - Lost of gossip, petty things, and favoritism

4.0
Mar 31, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Retirement thru CalPERS Health Benefirst Leave Credit - monthly Works shifts use to be flexible

Cons

* Goal in State employment is to ‘move up the ranks’ to gain salary and retirement benefits. Often managers try to move up their last 3 years to gain higher retirement, then age out. This sets up the system for individuals who wish to gain benefits than perform the job. * Management moves up the rank due to who they know, not based on true management skills as in the private sector. They also take the staff they choose based on ‘yes’ people to accomplish their own goals. * State system is outdated with bureaucracy, old policies and process, many staff say it’s like working in the 1990’s. * State does not have modern resources and often outsource to private contractors to complete work. * Managers don’t truly know how to manage, the training through Leadership programs are archaic and don’t train managers to motivate staff or work through process improvement. I’ve attended in observation of leadership trainings as I was a coordinator once and was surprised why the content of program. Have several friends promoted by choice and they mimic the same sentiment. * Unskilled managers rhetoric: “Thanks for all your work, we know we have less resources, but we trust you’ll get the job done.” Do not complete annual employee performance reviews, independent development plan, or training plans. Often employees have to ask for such evaluations.

Viewing 94 - 96 of 851 Reviews

Glassdoor has 970 Caltrans reviews submitted anonymously by Caltrans employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Caltrans is right for you.