Scientists in Croda's lab

Types of career at Croda

Whatever stage you are at, from starting out to changing direction, we offer meaningful work and opportunities for self-development. We support and encourage our people to gain cross-functional experience, focussed on strengthening skills and broadening knowledge. At all levels, we prioritise working responsibly through safety leadership, inclusive approaches to managing, and sustainable innovation.

As a truly global organisation, the Croda family reaches way beyond your base location. Our matrix structure provides opportunities to work with a diverse group of people, in cross-regional teams or through secondments.

If you want to develop, are motivated to achieve and care for the environment and society, we can offer a great career.
Graduate programmes available in your region

Joining at the start of your career: apprenticeships, internships, work experience and graduates and graduate development programmes

Having the opportunity to gain new skills and experiences is a vital part of career development.

Employees having a brain storming session

Joining with experience: skills and knowledge-based careers

Skilful and creative individuals help us deliver innovative ingredients to our customers around the world

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Carlos Oliveira da Silva, Lead Researcher, Incotec Brazil

OPINION: How to successfully develop a biological seed treatment

5 August 2025: Case study describing the development of a biological seed treatment for forage seeds in collaboration with the customer.
Process operator starts production at Incotec argentina's upgraded seed film coat production facility

Upgraded facility in Argentina fully operational

28 August 2025: Full production is now enabled at the ugraded seed enhancement site in Argentina, marking our commitment to serving the Latin American agricultural market
Ronald Chan, sales manager Incotec Australia/New Zealand

Speaker session at Seed Business 2025

12 August 2025: Europe is enforcing restrictions on intentionally added microplastics in seed treatments. What does this mean for the seed sector in Australia and New Zealand?