Field Service Engineer Jobs

83 jobs found (page 3 of 5)

Field Service Technician

Barry-Wehmiller logo
Barry-Wehmiller ·

Burlington, United States

C$30 - C$40/hour

Full-time

Field Service Technician - Controls UK

ATS Automation logo
ATS Automation ·

East Hertfordshire, United Kingdom

Full-time

PLC Programmer

BOS Innovations logo
BOS Innovations ·

Lexington, United States

Full-time

Field Service Tech II - Industrial Automation

NOVA Automation logo
NOVA Automation ·

Denver, United States

$40 - $60/hour

Full-time

Senior PLC Technician/Engineer

Enginuity Global logo
Enginuity Global ·

Baton Rouge, United States

$85k/year

Full-time

Field Service Maintenance & Automation Technician

GABLETEK logo
GABLETEK ·

Troy, United States

Full-time

AMR Layout Design Engineer

GABLETEK logo
GABLETEK ·

Troy, United States

Full-time

Automation Controls Service Technician

Samuel, Son & Co. logo
Samuel, Son & Co. ·

Waterloo, Canada

Full-time

Robotics Vision Engineer

Peak Technologies logo
Peak Technologies ·

Flint, United States

Full-time

Service Engineer - AGV

Dürr Systems Inc logo
Dürr Systems Inc ·

Detroit, United States

Full-time

Senior Manager - Commissioning

Schneider Electric logo
Schneider Electric ·

Mumbai City, India

Full-time

Field Service Specialist

Zeeco logo
Zeeco ·

Houston, United States

Full-time

Robotics Field Engineer

Beyondsoft Consulting logo
Beyondsoft Consulting ·

Kansas City / New Albany / Kuna / Altoona + 5 other locations

$80k-90k/year

Full-time

Robot Programmer

Paslin Company logo
Paslin Company ·

Warren, United States

Full-time

Robot Programmer

Paslin Company logo
Paslin Company ·

Shelby Charter Township, United States

Full-time

SCADA Engineer II

Flow Control Group logo
Flow Control Group ·

Plymouth / Alpharetta (Hybrid)

Full-time

Supervisor - Field Service - Audit

Vertiv logo
Vertiv ·

Bengaluru, India

Full-time

Field Service Technician

Nederman Shared Services, LLC logo
Nederman Shared Services, LLC ·

Mississauga, Canada

Full-time

AGV Project Engineer

Toyota Industries Corporation logo
Toyota Industries Corporation ·

Georgetown, United States

Full-time

Lead Automation Commissioning Engineer

Davie logo
Davie ·

Lévis, Canada

Full-time

Market Insight for Field Service Engineer Jobs

Based on data from 450 job postings • Updated

System integrators and equipment manufacturers employ most field service engineers. ABB leads with 33 open positions, followed by GE Vernova, KION Group, and other industrial automation vendors. These companies send engineers to customer facilities worldwide to get systems operational and keep them running.

The role demands a specific temperament. You need strong technical skills in Commissioning, PLC Programming, and troubleshooting, plus the ability to work independently under pressure at unfamiliar sites. When a production line is down and costing the customer six figures per hour, you're the person who needs to figure out why and fix it. Customer-facing communication matters as much as technical ability since you're the face of your company to frustrated plant managers.

Based on 122 job postings with salary data from CareersInRobotics.com, median compensation is $85,000 annually. Early-career engineers typically start around $72,800. Senior field service engineers with expertise across multiple systems and strong customer management skills earn $105,735 or more. Total compensation often exceeds base salary due to overtime, per diem, and travel bonuses. Some positions offer company vehicles, and most cover all travel expenses.

The work concentrates in system integration, industrial manufacturing, and energy sectors. You'll commission new installations, perform upgrades on existing systems, provide emergency troubleshooting when equipment fails, and train customer personnel. Projects range from single-machine installations to multi-month plant commissioning efforts requiring teams of field engineers.

Career paths typically start with supervised installations, advance to independent project work within 2-3 years, then progress into lead field engineer roles coordinating multi-person deployments. Some engineers transition into sales engineering or applications engineering roles that involve less travel. Others move into project management or regional service management positions. The travel-heavy lifestyle works well for younger engineers building experience but becomes harder to sustain long-term, which creates natural progression into less mobile roles.

Salary Distribution

$73k
$85k/yr
$106k
[ 25th ]
[ median ]
[ 75th ]
Based on 122 salary data points. Normalized to annual USD. Excludes top 5% of outliers. Top positions at premium companies can reach $200k+.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Field Service Engineer Jobs

Expect 50-80% travel depending on employer and territory. Most positions involve weekly travel to customer sites, often Monday through Thursday or Sunday through Friday. International assignments can mean weeks or months abroad commissioning large projects.

ABB, Siemens, and other major vendors typically assign engineers to geographic territories, which can reduce travel somewhat. System integrators often send engineers wherever projects demand, which can mean more unpredictable schedules and longer trips.

The travel intensity usually appears clearly in job descriptions. Some positions are designated as high-travel roles with 75%+ travel and compensated accordingly. Others focus on regional support with overnight trips but home most weekends. Nearly all field service roles involve some travel since the core function is on-site customer support.

You install, commission, and support automation and robotic systems at customer facilities. New installation projects involve hardware setup, system integration, programming, testing, and training customer personnel. Emergency service calls mean diagnosing and fixing failures under pressure when production is down.

Day-to-day work varies dramatically. One week you might commission a new robot cell at an automotive plant. The next week you're troubleshooting why a packaging line keeps faulting at a food processing facility. Projects can last from single-day service calls to multi-month installation efforts.

You work independently most of the time. Success requires troubleshooting skills, the ability to read electrical schematics and PLC code, mechanical aptitude for understanding how systems should move, and enough social skills to deal with frustrated customers professionally. You're often the most technically knowledgeable person on-site, so there's no one to ask when you're stuck.

Technical skills center on commissioning ability, PLC programming expertise, and field service experience. You need to debug PLC code, understand electrical systems, troubleshoot mechanical issues, and commission integrated systems that combine all three disciplines.

Platform knowledge matters significantly. Experience with Allen-Bradley, Siemens, or specific robot manufacturers like ABB, FANUC, or KUKA strengthens your position. Many employers train on their specific equipment, but you need foundational knowledge of industrial automation to succeed.

Soft skills are equally critical. You must communicate technical problems to non-technical customers, stay calm when production managers are panicking, work independently without supervision, and manage your time across multiple projects. Most employers want a technical degree or equivalent experience, though strong technicians with field experience can advance into these roles. Expect background checks and drug testing since you'll work at customer facilities, often in safety-critical environments.

System integrators employ the most field service engineers, followed by industrial manufacturing companies, energy and mining operations, and logistics providers. Equipment vendors like ABB, FANUC, and Siemens maintain large field service organizations to support their installed base.

System integrators send engineers to diverse customer sites. You might work in automotive plants, pharmaceutical packaging facilities, food processing operations, or distribution centers depending on your employer's focus. Energy sector positions often involve power generation facilities, substations, or mining operations.

Some manufacturers hire field service engineers directly to support their own facilities across multiple locations. These positions typically offer better work-life balance since you're supporting known systems rather than constantly commissioning new installations. Geographic demand exists wherever industrial automation is deployed, though concentration is highest in the Midwest, Southeast, and regions with heavy manufacturing or energy infrastructure.

Based on 122 job postings, median salaries are $85,000 annually. Early-career engineers start around $72,800, while experienced field service engineers managing complex projects and major customer accounts earn $105,735 or more.

Total compensation typically exceeds base salary. Overtime during commissioning projects, per diem for meals, travel bonuses, and company-provided vehicles or vehicle allowances add 15-25% to stated base pay. Some employers offer premium pay for international assignments or emergency callouts.

Compensation often reflects the travel burden. High-travel positions typically pay more than similar technical roles with less travel. Equipment vendors like ABB and Siemens tend to offer strong benefits and job stability. System integrators may pay higher base salaries but with more variable hours and project-based intensity.

295 active positions show consistent demand. Equipment always needs installation and support, which creates job security. The role offers strong technical skill development since you're exposed to diverse systems, industries, and failure modes.

Sustainability depends on your life stage. The travel lifestyle works well early in your career when you're building expertise and don't have family commitments. It becomes harder to sustain long-term for most people. Recognizing this, clear progression paths exist into sales engineering, applications engineering, project management, or service management roles that involve less travel.

Many engineers use field service as a springboard. The broad exposure to different systems and customer environments builds versatile troubleshooting skills and customer relationship abilities that transfer into other technical or commercial roles. Some field engineers love the travel and variety enough to make it a career, often advancing into senior technical specialist or training roles that mentor newer engineers.

Get the week's best robotics jobs

We review hundreds of postings weekly and hand-pick the top roles for you. High-salary positions, top companies, remote opportunities.

Please enter a valid email address

Unsubscribe anytime. We respect your privacy.

Hiring robotics & automation talent?

Post your job to reach qualified professionals in the robotics and automation industry.
Featured jobs get promoted on LinkedIn and shared with our growing talent network.

Post a Job - Free

First 3 jobs free per company • Then $49/post • 60-day listings