ENGINEERING & CONSTRUCTION

In Construction, the Bar for Changing Jobs Is Getting Higher

In this sneak peek from Worko’s upcoming Salary Trends & Preference Report 2026, the data points to a more selective Engineering & Construction market: candidates are not closed to change, but a new role needs to offer a clearer improvement than before.

In Construction, the Bar for Changing Jobs Is Getting Higher

Construction Candidates Are Weighing the Full Cost of a Move

Our data on Engineering professionals’ preferences suggests a market where candidates are becoming more careful about movement.

It doesn’t mean people are unwilling to change roles — but in a sector shaped by projects, locations, routines and long working relationships, changing jobs has to mean a clear improvement on more areas than a higher salary.

A new employer is rarely evaluated in isolation. Candidates look at the project pipeline, the commute, the team, the leadership structure, the compensation model and the stability of the company.

A new role may look interesting, but the decision to move seems to be determined by how much it improves the whole picture to be worth the disruption.

Money Isn’t Everything — People Are Putting Greater Value on Broader Compensation

When talking about preferences in how we like to be compensated for the work we do, getting a higher salary is usually at the top of people’s list. And while salary increase still does remain the topmost preferred form of payment in Construction, its dominance is weakening to the benefit of other types of compensation.

Since last year’s report, the salary increase preference fell from 43.6% to 35.1%, a shift of -8.5 percentage points.

This decline suggests that candidates are not judging compensation as only a number. Other parts of the package are gaining attention instead: pension, car packages, wellness programs and dynamic salary & bonus all rose in popularity, hinting at a new reasoning in the Construction industry: if a move creates uncertainty, changes the everyday setup, or pulls someone into a new project environment, the total offer needs to justify more than the salary line.

Development Is Becoming More Practical

The personal development data points to a shift away from purely linear career thinking.

Cross-competence, informal leadership and competence-sharing remain increasingly strong, while long-term engagements and role advancement are losing strength.

This could be interpreted as candidates prioritizing development that feels useful across projects and contexts. In a market where project types, technical requirements and delivery models are changing, candidates may value competence that travels well. Being able to understand more of the project, collaborate across functions and take informal responsibility can create more options than a narrow path upward.

Stability Is Not the Opposite of Ambition

Many Engineering & Construction candidates already have something valuable: a known team, a familiar project environment, a manageable commute, a stable employer, or a role that fits their current life. That makes the decision to move more demanding.

Staying can be a rational choice when the alternative is unclear. But that does not mean ambition is disappearing. Rather, it may mean that candidates are becoming more selective about which opportunities are worth acting on.

The new role has to improve the actual working reality — not just sound good on paper.

What Candidates May Be Weighing More Carefully

For Engineering & Construction professionals, the strongest career question may be very practical: What would this role change in my everyday life?

That question opens up a more grounded way of evaluating a career move.

1. Does the move improve the total package?

Not only salary, but pension, bonus model, car package, wellness and the stability of the employer behind the offer.

2. Does the location actually work?

A role can be attractive on paper and still be wrong if the commute, site setup or regional project reality creates too much friction.

3. Does the project give stronger future value?

More complex projects, broader responsibility or exposure to growing sectors can make a job switch more meaningful than a title change alone.

Read the Construction Career Trends Article

This preference data connects closely to what Worko’s recruiters are hearing in Engineering & Construction conversations right now.

In our Construction Career Trends article, we look at the questions candidates are asking in real conversations: what makes a role worth changing for, how stability affects movement, and why timing matters more in a market where fewer moves are made.

The Full Report Goes Deeper

This article is only one sneak peek from our upcoming Salary Trends & Preference Report 2026.

The full report takes a hypothesis-driven look at how salaries, skills and career preferences are shifting across Engineering & Construction in Sweden and Norway. It will explore which assumptions hold up in the data, which ones break, and what those signals may mean for career planning in a more selective market.

For now, one pattern is worth watching: Engineering & Construction candidates are not necessarily harder to reach. They may simply be more careful about moving without good reason.

Sign up to get on the waitlist for our upcoming Salary Trends & Preference Report 2026 and get the full analysis when it launches!

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